House Of Commons
Monday, 3rd August, 1903.
The House met at Two of the Clock.
The Chairman Of Ways And Means
The Clerk at the Table informed the House of the unavoidable absence of the Chairman of Ways and Means.
Unopposed Private Bill Business
Private Bills Lords (Standing Orders Not Previously In Quired Into Complied With)
Mr. SPEAKER laid upon the Table Report from one of the Examiners of Petitions for Private Bills, That, in the case of the following Bill, originating in the Lords, and referred on the First Reading thereof, the Standing Orders not previously inquired into, and which are applicable thereto, have been complied with, viz.:—North Metropolitan Electric Power Supply Bill [Lords].
Ordered, That the Bill be read a second time.
Bournemouth Gas and Water Bill [Lords]. Read the third time, and passed, with an Amendment.
Manchester Corporation Bill [Lords]; Scottish Ontario and Manitoba Land Company Bill [Lords]. Read the third time, and passed, with Amendments.
Brighton Corporation Bill [Lords]. As amended, considered; Amendments made; Bill to be read the third time.
Hastings Harbour District Railway Bill [Lords]; Liverpool University Bill [Lords]. As amended, considered; to be read the third time.
Preston, Chorley, and Horwich Tramways Bill [Lords]. As amended, considered; an Amendment made; Bill to be read the third time.
South Staffordshire Tramways Bill [Lords]. As amended, considered; to be read the third time.
Education Board Provisional Order Confirmation (London) Bill [Lords]; Gas and Water Orders Confirmation Bill [Lords]. Read the third time, and passed, with Amendments.
Airdrie and Coatbridge Tramways Order Confirmation.—Bill to confirm a Provisional Order under The Private Legislation Procedure (Scotland) Act, 1899, relating to Airdrie and Coatbridge Tramways, ordered to be brought in by the Lord Advocate and Mr. Solicitor-General for Scotland.
Airdrie and Coat bridge Tramways Order Confirmation Bill.—"To confirm a Provisional Order under The Private Legislation Procedure Scotland) Act, 1899, relating to Airdrie and Coatbridge Tramways." Presented accordingly; and ordered to be considered to-morrow.
Lerwick Harbour Improvements Act (1877) Amendment Order Confirmation.—Bill to confirm a Provisional Order under The Private Legislation Procedure (Scotland) Act, 1899, relating to Lerwick Harbour, ordered to be brought in by the Lord Advocate and Mr. Solicitor-General for Scotland.
Lerwick Harbour Improvements Act (1877) Amendment Order Confirmation Bill.—"To confirm a Provisional Order under The Private Legislation Procedure (Scotland) Act, 1899, relating to Lerwick Harbour." Presented accordingly; and ordered to be considered to-morrow.
Message From The Lords
That they have agreed to—Public Offices (Dublin) Bill; Local Government Provisional Orders (No. 5) Bill; Metropolitan Police Provisional Order Bill; Castleblaney, Keady, and Armagh Railway (Extension of Time) Bill, without Amendment.
Military Lands Bill, with an Amendment.
Pistols Bill; Ebbw Vale Water and Improvement Bill—now, Ebbw Vale Improvement Bill; Western Valleys (Monmouthshire) Sewerage Board Bill; Stroud and District Tramways Bill; Erith Tramways and Improvement Bill, with Amendments.
Amendments to—Manchester Southern Tramways Bill [Lords]; Gosport and Fareham Tramways Bill [Lords], without Amendment.
Petitions
Congested Districts (Scotland) (No 2) Bill
Petition from Stornoway, in favour; to lie upon the Table.
Sale Of Intoxicating Liquors On Sunday Bill
Petition from Faringdon, in favour; to lie upon the Table.
Ship Canal Between The Firths Of Forth And Clyde
Petition from Alloa, in favour of construction; to lie upon the Table.
Returns, Reports, Etc
Revenue Bill
Copy ordered "of Memorandum Explanatory of the Revenue Biil."—( Mr. Elliot.)
Copy presented accordingly; to lie upon the Table, and to be printed. [No. 307.]
Cunard Steamship Company, Limited
Copy presented, of an Agreement, dated 30th July, 1903, between the Admiralty, the Board of Trade, and the Postmaster-General, of the one part, and the Cunard Steamship Company, Limited, of the other part, with Copy of Treasury Minute thereon, dated 31st July 1903, and Copies of the said Company's Memorandum and Articles of Association and of a draft Trust Deed for securing Debenture Stock [by Command]; to lie upon the Table.
Canada (Preferential Tariff For Goods For The United Kingdom)
Return presented, relative thereto [ordered 29th July; Mr. Alfred Davies]; to lie upon the Table, and to be printed. [No. 310.]
Local Government Board
Copy presented, of Supplement to the Thirty-first Annual Report of the Local Government Board, 1901–2, in continuation of the Report of the Medical Officer for 1901–2, on Lead Poisoning and Water Supplies, Vol. II. [by Command]; to lie upon the Table.
Greenwich Hospital And Travers' Foundation
Copy presented, of Statement of the estimated Income and Expenditure of Greenwich Hospital and of Travers' Foundation for the year 1903–4 [by Act]; to lie upon the Table, and to be printed. [No. 311.]
Public Works Loans Bill
Return presented, relative thereto [ordered 29th July; Mr. Elliot]; to lie upon the Table, and to be printed. [No. 309.]
Questions And Answers Circulated With The Votes
Yeomanry Training On Chobham Common
To ask the Secretary of State for War whether he is aware that the 3rd Company of London Imperial Yeomanry, which is at present undergoing its annual training at Chobham, has been forbidden to manœuvre on Chobham Common; and, if so, will he state the reason for such prohibition. (Answered by Mr. Secretary Brodrick.) This company has been refused permission to manœuvre on Chobham Common, but I am not aware of the reasons for the refusal. It has, however, been granted permission to manœuvre in Windsor Park.
Construction Of Rackwick Road Walls, Orkney
To ask the Lord Advocate if, in view of the facts that have been laid before the Congested Districts Board, an independent officer will be sent to report to the Board on the Rackwick Road, Walls, Orkney, and the necessity or otherwise for its immediate construction. (Answered by Mr. A. Graham Murray.) The Secretary for Scotland is not of opinion that any special inquiry is necessary in regard to the proposed Rackwick Road. The Congested Districts Board will consider the respective importance of this and other roads submitted by the County Council as soon as the Board are satisfied that the roads towards which grants have already been authorised are approaching completion, and an inquiry will be sent to the County Council asking for a report as to the exact state of progress of the several roads for which grants have been authorised.
Construction Of Causeway At Longhope, Orkney
To ask the Lord Advocate if he will state what steps have been taken by the Congested Districts Board to secure the fulfilment of the arrangement for the construction of a causeway over the Ayre at Longhope, Orkney. (Answered by Mr. A. Graham Murray.) The Congested Districts Board are informed that with the exception of a portion which it is proposed to leave un-causewayed until next year in order to test the effect of the winter storms, the causeway is expected to be finished by the end of September.
Increment To Telegraphists For Postal Knowledge—Case At Shrewsbury
To ask the Postmaster-General whether he is aware that four telegraphists stationed at the Shrewsbury office, who were transferred from amalgamated offices, have received the increment for postal knowledge, while another telegraphist at the same town, who was transferred from an amalgamated office, has been refused the increment; and, if so, whether he will explain the reason for this difference of treatment, and have the case investigated, with a view to the concession of the increment. (Answered by Mr. Austen Chamberlain.) As I stated in reply to a similar Question on Friday,† if the name of the officer referred to is furnished I will inquire into the matter.
Sea Sorting Post Offices On Cunard Liners
To ask the Postmaster-General if he can state whether any, and, if so, what, arrangement has now been made for the establishment of sea sorting post offices on the mail steamers to New York of the Cunard line. (Answered by Mr. Austen Chamberlain.) I must refer the hon. Member to the Answer given to his Question on this subject asked on the 9th of last month.‡ I am not in a position to give further information
Publication Of Registrar General's Report And Supplement To Annual Report Of Local Government Board
To ask the President of the Local Government Board when the Sixty-fourth Annual Report (Births, Deaths, and Marriages, England) of the Registrar General for 1901, presented 4th August 1902, and when the Supplement to the Thirty-first Annual Report of the Local Government Board, 1901–2, containing the Report of the Medical Officer for 1901–2, presented 3rd November 1902, will be delivered; if he can say what has been the cause of the delay in the publication of these Reports; and if he will take steps to alter the practice of presenting Command Papers in dummy in one session when not ready, and not delivering them until the next, in view of the inconvenience involved. (Answered by Mr. Walter Long.) As regards the Annual Report of the Registrar General, I am informed that it will be issued with very little further delay. The Registrar General states that the Report has been delayed exceptionally this year on account of the heavy pressure in his office due to the preparation of the Census Returns, and
† See page 1080.
also to an important change which it has been found necessary to make in the tabulation of deaths. The Report of the Medical Officer of the Local Government Board, to which the hon. Member refers, has gone to press and will, I understand, probably be issued within a month. The issue of the Report this year has been delayed through the amount of special work which has been thrown on the medical branch in connection with the recent smallpox epidemic. I am desirous that Reports which are presented in dummy should be issued as soon as possible afterwards; but, as the hon. Member will see, the delay in the present cases was due to exceptional circumstances.‡See (4) Debates, cxxv., 150.
Indian Commercial Relations With Tibet
To ask the Secretary of State for India whether he can give any information as to the negotiations alleged to be in progress between the Governments of China and of India as to India's commercial relations with Tibet; whether the Government of India has it in contemplation to impose any system of commercial relations on the Government of Tibet; and, whether he can lay any Papers upon the Table giving information as to the commercial resources of Tibet. (Answered by Secretary Lord George Hamilton.) The negotiations shortly to commence will deal with difficulties which have risen in the conduct of trade between India and Tibet under the regulations drawn up and signed by British and Chinese Commissioners in 1893 to give effect to the Convention of 1890 between Great Britain and China. The negotiations will also deal with grazing and other disputes on the northern frontier of Sikkim and Tibet, which were laid down in the Convention. This Convention and the regulations have been published as a Parliamentary Return [C. 7312] of session 1894. As to the commercial resources of Tibet, there are no Papers which I can lay on the Table of the House. The imports from Tibet into India during the last five years averaged £115,000 per annum. The chief article of import is wool. A certain amount of borax, musk, salt, and living animals is also imported.
Irish Education—Fees For Teaching Irish
To ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether, in national schools in Ireland, the principal teacher has authority to return his own name, solely, on the annual Returns for the teaching of Irish, not with standing that his assistant has also taught it during the annual period, but whose name does not appear on the annual sheets; and whether, in such a case, any remedy is open to the assistant by which he might recover his share of the fees earned by teaching this extra subject. (Answered by Mr. Wyndham.) I am informed by the Commissioners that the principal teacher has no authority to return his own name as sole teacher of Irish, if instruction is also given in the subject by the assistant teacher. If the hon. Member will communicate to the Commissioners the particulars of any such case the matter will be inquired into and a remedy applied if necessary.
Persons In Receipt Of Relief Return
To ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether the Return standing on to-day's Paper, relative to Boards of Guardians (Persons in receipt of Relief), similar to the Return recently ordered for England and Wales, will be granted. (Answered by Mr. Wyndham.) On Tuesday last pointed out to the hon. Member that the preparation of a Return such as suggested would entail an immense amount of labour on the part of local authorities, and that I hesitate to impose this labour, the more particularly at the present moment, when the Poor Law Commission propose to compile statistics in the matter which will be duly published. The Return referred to is as follows—Boards of Guardians (Persons in Receipt of Relief) Return showing, in respect of each union and urban or rural district in Ireland, the number of persons of each sex in receipt from Boards of Guardians (a) of indoor relief or (b) of out-door relief on the first day of October, 1903, who were over sixty years of age, distinguishing those who were over sixty and under sixty-five, sixty-five and under seventy, seventy and under seventy-five, seventy-five and under eighty, and eighty years of age and upwards; lunatics in asylums, licensed houses, and registered hospitals; vagrants and persons who were only in receipt of relief constructively by reason of relief being given to wives or children, not being included; and. showing in regard to (a) the number of those who in the opinion of the medical, officer of the workhouse could not satisfactorily take care of themselves owing to mental or physical infirmity.
Revision Court For Dalkey
To ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether he has received resolutions from the Killiney and Dalkey Urban District Councils requesting that a revision Court may be held in Dalkey; and, if so,, whether he will advise the Lord Lieutenant to arrange this. (Answered by Mr. Wyndham). An official communication on this subject wag addressed to the hon. Member on the 1st instant. To that communication I have nothing to add.
Health Of John M'elligott, A Prisoner In Dundalk Gaol
To ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether he has received any reports from the Medical Officer of Dundalk Gaol as to the condition of health of John M'Elligott; whether he is aware that M'Elligott is 76 years of age, and that he has been now two years in prison for contempt of Court; and whether it has been brought under his notice that one of M'Elligott's daughters has offered to take her father's place in prison if the Court will release M'Elligott; and, if so, will he state whether he can take any action in the matter. (Answered by Hr. Wyndham.) Reports on the condition of health of prisoners committed for contempt of Court are made at regular intervals to the committing Judge. The medical officer of the prison states that M'Elligott is sleeping and eating well, and is in a better condition of health than when he was first committed. I have no information in respect to the second part of the Question, and can only repeat what I stated in answer to the honourable Member's previous Question of the 13th July,† that the Master of the Rolls has on several occasions informed the prisoner that a verbal undertaking to abstain from repeating his contempt will be followed by immediate release.
Suggested Steamer Service Between Sligo And Galway
To ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Len-tenant of Ireland, whether, in view of the fact that the agricultural and manufacturing industries along the coast of Mayo are handicapped owing to the railway charges for the carriage of goods, and that a steamer service between Sligo and Galway, calling at the different towns on the coast of Mayo, would materially assist the development of those industries by cheapening the transit of goods, he will see that such a service is established. (Answered by Mr. Wyndham.) If, as I hope, a harbour is constructed at Inishlyre, it is not unreasonable to expect that steamers will call there without subsidies.
Military Books For Officers' Messes
To ask the Secretary of State for War whether, in view of the cost of military books to officers and of the fact that there is a military library only at large stations, where the greater part of the Army has not access to it, he will make arrangements to supply to each mess a library of standard military works to enable all officers co study their profession. (Answered by Mr. Secretary Brodrick.) This question has been arid is now under consideration, but it is not possible to make any statement on the subject at present.
Full Head-Dress For Royal Irish Rifles Militia
To ask the Secretary of state for War, whether he is aware that during the King's visit to the North of Ireland a guard of honour of Royal Irish Rifles Militia had to borrow their full head-
dresses from the regular battalion of the same regiment owing to the fact that full head-dress has never yet been provided for the men of Militia rifle battalions; and, if so, will he say when such full headdress will be provided. (Answered by Mr. Secretary Brodrick.) Militia Rifle battalions, Fusiliers, and Highlanders have no full dress head-dress, and, in view of the heavy expense, there is no intention of issuing it.†See (4) Debates, cxxv., 407.
Great Britain And Canada—Bounties On Pig Iron
To ask the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether, when the preferential tariff in favour of Great Britain by Canada was increased in 18971898 to 25 per cent., the bounty given on iron was increased from 2 dols. to 3 dols. per ton; what was the production of pig iron in Canada in 1897 and in 1901; whether, when the question of preferential duties was discussed at the Conference in 1902, any proposal was made to abandon the condemned principle of bounties to private manufacture in Canada; and whether it is proposed to establish bounties on iron in Australia. (Answered by Mr. Secretary Chamberlain.) In 1898 the bounty on pig iron made from Canadian ore was raised from 2 dols. to 3 dols per ton. The bounty on pig iron made from imported ore remained at 2 dols. per ton The production of pig iron in Canada in 1897 was 58,007 tons, and in 1901 274,376 tons. The question of bounties was not discussed at the Conference. I have no information as to any proposal to establish bounties in Australia.
Immigrants Into Canada
To ask the Secretary of State for the Colonies if he can state the number of immigrants into the Dominion of Canada in 1900 and 1901 respectively, distinguishing between those of the following nationalities: United States, British, Galicians, Germans, Scandinavians, French, Belgians, Doukhobors, and other nationalities. (Answered by Secretary Chamberlain.) Owing to the change in 1900 of the period for which immigration statistics in Canada are given from the calendar year to the fiscal year, which ends on 30th June, I am unable to give the Return desired; but probably the following information from the latest Report of the
| Nationality. | 1899. | 1900 (six months) to 30th June. | Year ending 30th June. | |
| 1901. | 1902. | |||
| United States | 11,945 | 8,543 | 17,987 | 26,388 |
| English and Welsh | 8,576 | 4,129 | 9,401 | 13,095 |
| Scotch | 1,337 | 669 | 1,476 | 2,853 |
| Irish | 747 | 343 | 933 | 1,311 |
| Galicians | 6,700 | 4,992 | 4,702 | 6,550 |
| Germans | 780 | 476 | 984 | 1,048 |
| Scandinavians | 1,526 | 714 | 1,750 | 2,451 |
| French and Belgians | 413 | 253 | 492 | 654 |
| Russian and Finlanders | 735 | 1,310 | 1,726 | 3,759 |
| Hungarians | 276 | 370 | 546 | 1,048 |
| Austrians | 131 | 155 | 228 | 320 |
| Miscellaneous Nationalities | 11,377 | 1,941 | 8,924 | 7,902 |
| Totals | 44,543 | 23,895 | 49,149 | 67,379 |
Increase Of Population Of Canada
To ask the Secretary of State for the Colonies if he can state the rate of increase in the population of the Dominion of Canada between 1891 and 1901, and how it compares with the rate of increase in Great Britain during the same period. (Answered by Mr. Secretary Chamberlain.) The increase in the population of the Dominion of Canada in the 10 years 1891 to 1901 was 11·14 per cent. The increase in the population of the United Kingdom during the same period was 9·9 per cent.
Decrease Of Birth Rate In Australia And New Zealand
To ask the Secretary of State for the Colonies if he has any official information showing whether the continuous decrease in the Mirth rates in Australia and New Zealand from 38 and 40 per thousand respectively in 1871 to 27 and 26 respectively in 1901 is due to circumstances peculiar to those colonies; and if he can state the corresponding birth rates in the Dominion.of Canada in 1871 and 1901. (Answered by Mr. Secretary Chamberlain.) I have no official information as to the causes to which the decline in the birth rate of the Australian Colonies and New
Canadian Department of the interior will be sufficient.
Immigrants into Canada for settlement, 1899 to 1902:—
Zealand is due. There are no complete statistics as to the birth rate in Canada. One of the provinces has no registry of births and deaths.
Imports Into Canada
To ask the Secretary to the Board of Trade, what was the value of dutiable goods imported into Canada for home consumption for the year 1902 under the general tariff, from Great Britain, the United States, Germany, France, Belgium, and Holland: from Great Britain under the preferential tariff: and, what was the value of all iron and steel, manufactured and unmanufactured, imported from Great Britain into Canada in the years 1900 and 1901; and what was the amount of bounty paid upon iron in Canada in the years 1897 and 1901. (Answered by Mr. Gerald Balfour.) The value of dutiable goods imported into Canada for consumption in the year 1901–2 under the general tariff from the countries named was as follows: Great Britain, £1,301,614; United States, £12,370,705; Germany, £1,866,116; France, £1,140,191; Belgium, £295,351; Holland, £105,507. From Great Britain under the preferential tariff, £5,905,691. The value of iron and steel, manufactured and unmanufactured imported from Great Britain in 1899–1900 was £1,178,144; in 1900–1901, £699,556; in 1901–02, £1,314,727. The bounties on iron and steel paid by the Canadian Government in 1886–7 amounted to £20,543; in 1900–1901, to £96,204.
Questions In The House
Somali Operations—Stopping Power Of Bullets
I beg to ask the Secretary of State for War, what action he proposes to take with reference to General Manning's official report, that the present service ammunition has little stopping power, and that in a fanatical rush of savages a heavier bullet, or one with greater stopping power, is very requisite.
Ammunition possessing greater stopping power than the service ammunition has been sent to Somaliland.
Canada And Irish Home Rule
I beg to ask the Secretary of State for the Colonies, whether he is aware that resolutions in favour of Home Rule for Ireland were recently adopted in the Canadian Parliament: and, if so, whether he will place a copy of these resolutions upon the Table of the House.
I suppose the hon. Member refers in his Question to an Address to the Crown passed by the Canadian Parliament in favour of Home Rule for Ireland. There is no objection to laying a copy of it on the Table of the House.
suggested that the Cabinet should, in view of the importance of colonial opinion, extend their inquiry to the question of Home Rule for Ireland.
Kobé Consular Report
I beg to ask the Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, if he will state when the Kobe Consular Report is likely to be issued; and will arrangements be made for the Report to be issued earlier in the year in future.
Since the Question was put upon the Paper the Report has been issued. The date of issue must in a measure depend upon the date on which the Returns are available from which the figures are compiled.
Soudan Civil Service
I beg to ask the Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether there is any kind of examination for candidates desirous of entering the service of the Government of the Soudan; and, if not, will he direct the Governor-General to arrange for some educational test, especially as regards a knowledge of Arabic.
There is at present no examination for candidates desirous of entering the service of the Government of the Soudan. The matter is under consideration.
United States Sugar
I beg to ask the President of the Board of Trade whether, in view of the statement on page 11 of the Findings of the Permanent Commission, that the United States sends us no bountied sugar, his attention has been directed to the fact that 23,000 cwts. of sugar was received last year from the United States, that bounties upon sugar cultivation and production have been given in the United States for thirteen years past, having been initiated at the same time as the countervailing duties on foreign bountied sugar, and that details of sugar bounties given in the State of New York are given in the Consular Report for that district; and, if so, whether he will say if any communications have taken place between the Government and the Government of the United States on the possibility that American sugar may be prohibited from entry if the Sugar Convention Bill came into force; and, if so, whether he will lay them upon the Table.
I see no reason to doubt the correctness of the statement referred to in the Question as to the amount of sugar received last year from the United States. His Majesty's Government are not aware of any evidence that it was bounty-fed, but the decision whether or not sugar exported from any country is bounty-fed lies with the Brussels Commission, and in the absence of any such finding no action is called for on the part of His Majesty's Government, and no communications have passed between the two Governments.
American Shoe Trade
I beg to ask the President of the Board of Trade whether his attention has been directed to the statement in the Consular Report on the Trade of the United States that the Hinted States attribute the decrease in their shoe trade to the fact that British manufacturers are able to obtain American machinery from the linked States cheaper than the Americans themselves can buy it on the spot; and, if so, will this fact be brought to the attention of those holding the inquiry into the fiscal system of this country.
I have seen the statement in question. Points of tins nature will of course be borne in mind.
Stornoway Fishermen's Dwellings
I beg to ask the Lord Advocate whether, seeing that the proprietor of the Island of Lewis has not yet come to terms with the applicants for fens for fishermen's dwellings near Stornoway, he will state what steps the Congested Districts Board propose to take in the matter.
The Congested Districts Board's last information was that fees to be taken up by each applicant had not yet been arranged but were not expected to present much difficulty of adjustment. The matter is primarily one between the superior and the feuars: but the Board will make further inquiry as to the reason for delay.
Is the right hon. Gentleman aware that the same state of things has been going on for the past twelve years?
No, Sir.
South Uist Crofters
I beg to ask the Lord Advocate whether the promised inquiry into the condition of the crofters and cottars in South Uist is now proceeding; and, if so, when the Report may be expected to be issued.
As the hon. Member is aware, the district referred to in the Question has been the subject of anxious and careful consideration by the Secretary for Scotland early in the present year. The Secretary for Scotland had given instructions some time ago for a special inquiry into some matters brought under his notice, but before it could take place letters arrived containing distinct threats of unlawful action, and the Secretary for Scotland felt compelled, though with reluctance, to suspend for a time the instruction he hail given. It is his intention to allow the inquiry to take place at a suitable time, but he is unable to give any assurance in regard either to the date when the inquiry will be held or when the Report may be expected. I ant to add that a good deal will depend on the attitude adopted by those in the island who have endeavoured by threats to secure compliance with their wishes.
Westminster Abbey
I beg to ask the hon. Member for West Derbyshire, as representing the First Commissioner of Works, whether he has considered the proposals of the Ecclesiastical Commissioners to demolish the old residential quarter immediately south of Westminster Abbey and Deanery Garden, with a view to selling the sites for important commercial buildings; and whether, having regard to the undesirability and risk of erecting lofty buildings close to the Abbey, His Majesty's Government will make representations to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, or take other steps to prevent this proposal from being carried out.
This is a matter which does not come within the jurisdiction of the First Commissioner of Works. But he would strongly deprecate any building scheme which might impair the safety or amenity of the Abbey.
Has the Commissioner of Works no power over the height of buildings adjacent to such a building as Westminster Abbey.
I am afraid not. I can add nothing to my answer.
Dublin Golf Club
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether his attention has been drawn to the sale in the Land Judge's Court of a portion of the North Bull to the trustees of the Dublin Golf Club, and, if so, whether, seeing that this portion of land has been used as public recreation ground, will he take steps to prevent it falling into the hands of private owners.
I am informed that the property in question is and always has been private property. The Golf Club have no intention, I understand, of preventing the public from using, as a recreation ground, the portion of the North Bull acquired by the Club.
Ballincollig Royal Powder Mills, Cork
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether he is aware that the Ballincollig Royal Powder Mills, County Cork, have been closed since 30th June, and that in consequence a number of workmen have been thrown out of employment and are at present threatened with eviction from their cottages and plots of land; and if so, seeing that the present proprietors do not intend to reopen the mills, will he recommend to the proper authorities the desirability of negotiating for their purchase with a view to having them taken over and worked by the Government.
I have communicated this Question to the War Department, and am informed that it does not require to purchase any powder mills.
Irish National School Teachers
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland if he will state how many teachers in the service of the Commissioners of National Education, who are officially registered as first division of first class, are precluded by the seventy average (Rule 195 J) from attaining the maximum salary attached to the first section of the first grade; how many of these teachers are, as at present circumstanced, debarred from receiving any increments to their present salaries, as indicated in Rule 200, Section 2 (c); and whether, seeing that such teachers have been promoted to that class as a reward for efficiency and scholarship, as well as for long service, he will direct the attention of the Commissioners to their alleged grievances.
I am informed by the Commissioners that there are 142 principal teachers registered under the old regulations as in the first division of the first class, who, owing to the fact that there is not an average attendance of severity pupils at the national schools in which they are serving, cannot receive the maximum salary prescribed for first division of the first grade teachers, and cannot receive any increments to their present salaries. These and other first division of first class teachers who are serving in smaller schools have no grievances under the new system of payments. The first grade income under the new system is an entirely different thing from first class salary under the old regulations.
Will the right hon. Gentleman communicate with the Commissioners and point out the undesirability of the placing these Civil servants in a worse position in regard to promotion than other Civil servants?
I understand that they are not labouring under any such grievance.
Irish Housing Question
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether his attention has been called to the fact that the Housing Bill of the President of the Local Government Board, about to be introduced as a Government measure, does not extend to Ireland; and whether it is the intention of the Government to also introduce a measure dealing with the question of the housing of the working classes in Ireland.
The reply to the first part of the Question is in the affirmative. As already stated, it is my intention during the autumn to consider the whole question of the housing of the labouring classes in Ireland.
When the right hon. Gentleman refers to the housing of the labouring classes does he mean the working classes generally?
The questions are somewhat germane. We had better take a view of the whole field.
Will that include the housing of the working classes in cities and towns?
I cannot give any pledges. I have said the whole subject will be considered, but I cannot go into details.
Sligo And The Congested Districts Board
On behalf of the hon. Member for South Sligo, I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether, in view of the fact that since its formation the Congested Districts Board have expended the sum of £86,025 in the counties of Donegal, Mayo, and Galway, whilst only £2,183 have been given to Sligo, and that applications for grants from Sligo have recently been refused by hat body, steps will be taken to have a representative from Sligo on the Congested Districts Board.
The figures quoted erpresent expenditure on engineering works only. There is no vacancy at present on the Board.
Sligo Constabulary Office
On behalf of the hon. Member for South Sligo, I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Inland whether, in view of the fact that extra clerks have been employed during the past eighteen months in the office of the County In- spector, Royal Irish Constabulary, at Sligo, he will state whether this extra staff, which includes a detective sergeant, is still continued; and, if so, will he state the nature of their duties and the amount payable by the ratepayers for their maintenance.
One additional constable clerk has been employed. His services are still required. The extra expense involved is borne by the Constabulary Vote.
Enniskillen Prison
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland why the County Fermanagh Grand Jury were asked at last Assizes to appoint visiting justices to the disused Enniskillen prison, and why they were not asked to appoint visiting justices to the prison where Fermanagh prisoners are sent.
The request, I am informed, was made by inadvertence The representation of the County Fermanagh Grand Jury on the Visiting Committee of the Sligo prison will be duly provided for.
Lismore Rural Council And The Crimes Act
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether he has received a copy of a resolution of the Lismore Rural Council urging the repeal of the Criminal Law and Procedure (Ireland) Act, 187, and resolutions of other public bodies in Ireland to the same effect; and, if so, whether he will undertake to consider the subject with a view to legislation in the next session of Parliament in the sense indicated.
Yes, Sir; resolutions to this effect have been received. The question raised is one of policy upon which I have no statement to make.
Lloyd Apjohn Property, County Limerick
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland what progress has been made with the sale to the tenants of the Lloyd Apjohn property in the parish of Grean, county Limerick; and whether it will now be carried out under the Purchase Acts hitherto prevailing, or under the Purchase Act foreshadowed in the Bill at present before Parliament.
On Thursday last the Land Judge expressed dissatisfaction at the non-settlement of the rental of the estate and adjourned the proceedings until November. He also announced that if the rental was not completed by November he would transfer the charge of the estate to another solicitor.
Who is responsible for this unsatisfactory position of affairs?
I infer some delay was due to the solicitor.
Policemen As Clerks Of Petty Sessions
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether he is aware that the rules for the appointment of clerks of petty sessions provide that policemen and others up to the age of fifty years are eligible to compete, whilst civilians over the age of forty years are disqualified; and, if so, whether he will take steps to either raise the limit for all candidates, or to place policemen on a level with candidates who have not been in receipt of public money.
The age limit of fifty years applies also to civilians, such as practising barristers, solicitors, clerks, and justices of the peace. These persons and retired officers of the constabulary possess a special knowledge of the duties of petty sessions clerk, and the limit was designedly extended to secure their services. It is not proposed to raise the limit in the case of other persons not so qualified.
Is it the opinion of the right hon. Gentleman that a policeman past the age of fifty years is fit to become a petty sessions clerk?
Under the maximum of fifty, yes.
Irish Development Grant
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether in apportioning the money available under the Irish Development Grant for different purposes, the views of public bodies and others in reference to primary education and economic development will receive consideration as well as the views of those in official positions.
Certainly.
Is it not the fact that this money cannot be allocated without the consent of Parliament?
reply was inaudible.
Irish Industrial Inquiry
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether he is aware that a Select Committee was appointed in the Session 1884–5 to inquire into the natural resources and the present condition of manufacturing and productive industries in Ireland, and to report how those natural resources may be more fully developed, and how those industries may be encouraged and extended; and that the Committee was unable in the time at their disposal to take sufficient evidence to enable them to agree upon specific recommendations, but recommended that a Committee be appointed in the next session of Parliament to continue the inquiry; and, if so, whether, in view of the importance of such inquiry and its bearing on the future prospects of Ireland, he will see that the Committee is re-appointed.
It is not intended, nor is it necessary, to re-appoint the Committee of 1885. The Recess Committee has since made a special study of the industrial position and needs of Ireland. The results of their investigations have been published. The Department of Agriculture and Technical Instruction, created by the Act of 1899, has been furnished with funds and machinery for the purpose of carrying out such inquiries, and is constantly engaged, through its experts and with the aid of advisory committees representative of particular industries, in conducting investigations much more direct and definite than would be possible by a Parliamentary Committee. The Department has already published the results of much of the economic information so far acquired, and is constantly supplementing these publications.
Queen's County Jury Panel
I big to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether Ins attention has been directed to the fact that the name of a juror rated at over £100 has been struck off the special jury panel of Queen's County by the rate collector without direction from the Judge of Assize or Revising Barrister; and, if so, will he state under what authority the rate collector so acted.
If the hon. Member will forward me the name I will inquire.
Crofters' Holdings (Scotland) Act (1886) Amendment Bill
I beg to ask the First Lord of the Treasure whether he has yet considered the advisability of giving facilities for the Crofters' Holdings (Scotland) Act (1886) Amendment Bill, the object of which is to extent the benefits of the Crofters Act, 1886, to small tenants holding under lease in the crafting counties.
was under stood to say he could hold out no hope to the hon. Member on the matter.
Business Of The House
asked as to the course of business.
I hope I may take after twelve o'clock to-night the Report of the Sugar Convention (Expenses and Duties) Resolution; Board of Agriculture and Fisheries Bill, Second Reading; Poor Law (Dissolution of Scholl Districts and Adjustments) Bill, Third Reading; Public Buildings Expenses Bill, Second Reading; Ireland Development Grant Bill, consideration as amended; Naval Works Bill, Third Reading and Patriotic Fund Bill, Committee. There are certain Supplementary Estimates which we must take after twelve o'clock in order to comply with the Standing Order; but these, I believe, are quite uncontroversial.
Can the right hon. Gentleman say as to Wednesday and Friday?
No, it is impossible to foresee the exact course of the business.
When is Supply to be closed?
Thursday is the penultimate day.
Will the Government give any facilities for the Butter Bill, to which so much time has been devoted?
I am afraid I cannot give any promise of that kind.
Patent Office (Extension) Bill
Reported from the Select Committee with Minister of Evidence.
Minutes of Proceedings to be printed. [No. 308.]
Report to lie upon the Table and to be printed. [No. 308.]
Bill, as amended, re-committed to a Committee of the Whole House for to-morrow, and to be printed. [Bill 308.]
Light Railways Bill Lords
Read the first time; to be read a second time to-morrow, and to be printed, [Bill 309.]
New Bill
Liquor Sellers' Liability Bill
"To provide for the payment of compensation by sellers of liquor in certain cases," presented by Sir Wilfrid Lawson supported by Mr. T. W. Russell; to be read a second time upon Monday next, and to be printed. [Bill 310.]
Business Of The House (Supply)
Ordered, That the Civil Service Supplementary Estimates, 1903–4 (New Services), and Army Excess Vote, 1901–2, may be considered in Committee of Supply at this evening's Sitting after midnight—( Mr. A. J. Balfour.)
Supply 21St Allotted Day
(Considered in Committee.)
(In the Committee.)
[Mr. JEFFREYS (Hampshire, N.) in the Chair.]
Army Estimates, 1903–4
Motion made, and Question proposed, "That a suns, not exceeding £6,895,000, be granted to His Majesty, to defray the charge for provisions, forage, and other supplies, including South African compensation claims, which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March 1904."
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moved to reduce the Vote by £100. He said the recruits of the; Army were not fed as well as the trained soldiers, who had an extra 3d. per day messing allowance. This extra allowance the recruit was not allowed to have until he was nineteen years of age, or had what was called the physical equivalent of that age, and even then he must have served six months and given evidence of satisfactory progress. It was very hard on him, because at the time he entered the Army he was usually underfed; he had, moreover, to work hard and constantly, and was at a time of life when food was most necessary to him. The Secretary for War two years ago had said that the matter had been carefully considered, but that it would appear that there was no justification for relaxing the regulations. He regarded that answer as satisfactory, because had he been merely told that the matter was under consideration lip would have been perfectly hopeless, because when once a question reached that stage in the War Office nothing more was ever heard about it. Now, however, he hoped that the right hon. Gentleman would be able to hold out some hope that, if not immediately, at any rate next year he would be able to see his way to relax the regulations and give the recruit the increased food which he so urgently required.
Motion made and Question proposed, "That Item A (Cost of Provisions) be reduced by £100." ( Colonel Legge.)
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said this question had been frequently before the House during the last two years. The food of the Army was still inferior in quantity to the food of the Navy, which, however, had recently been increased as a result of the Report of a recent inquiry, and he believed the greatest difficulty in the way of recruiting at present was the smaller quantity of food given in the Army. He entirely endorsed, therefore, the remarks of his hon. and gallant friend. There was another matter which certainly ought to he looked into by the Committee. They had recently had the question raised of the destruction of rations in South Africa, and also as to the quality of the rations supplied. With reference to this question a book had just been published which deserved attention. He referred to Sir Wodehouse Richardson's recent book, "With the Army Service Corps in South Africa." Sir Wodehouse Richardson, who was the principal officer of the Army Service Corps in South Africa, gave the real dates of the mobilisation of the expeditionary force, which were very different from the dates given to that House, and dealing with rations, said that 20,000,000 lbs. of preserved meat and vegetable rations passed under his surveillance. The following entry appeared in his diary—
After such a statement from so high an authority he thought an explanation should be given by the Government on the subject. He was aware that it was alleged on behalf of those who supplied the rations that the goods were damaged.—wilfully or carelessly—before they were tested, by persons in Government employ, but certainly this was a matter on which they ought to press the Government for a clear statement of the confession which had come into their possession."Meat and vegetable rations. A large proportion of those sent to South Africa were found to be unfit for consumption."
supported the appeal which had been made in favour of an improvement in the rations of the private soldier. He did not go so far as to say that it was necessary the youngest recruits should have exactly the same full ration as the full fighting man, but still there was room for improvement. He wished mainly to point out that the private soldier did not object so much to the food itself as to the way in which it was prepared and served, and he suggested that some little expense might be incurred in providing the men with proper utensils. It was not calculated to encourage decent men to join the Army to compel them to take their liquid nourishment out of an earthen ware bowl.
A mug.
said the right hon. Gentleman might call it a mug, but it had no handle, and it was very unpopular in the Army. Why not provide the soldiers with some more decent method of consuming their rations? Let them lame the ordinary appendages of civilised feeding. It would not involve very great expense, but it would remove a serious grievance which certainly had a tendency to discourage recruiting.
said he had addressed several Questions to the Secretary for War on the question of the destruction of rations at Pretoria, and he would now like to know the result of the right hon. Gentleman's communications with South Africa on the subject. This was an extremely serious matter. Something like £80,000 worth of rations were declared to be unlit and were ordered to be destroyed. In view of the appalling amount of distress which existed in all parts of the country—in view of the hundreds of thousands of people actually in a state of starvation—or verging upon starvation, it was a horrible thing to read that £80,000 worth of the rations paid for by the taxpayers of the country had had to be destroyed as if they were so much rubbish in South Africa. The matter called for the most searching inquiry on the part of the Government. When he first put the Question he had not the faintest idea of the names of the firms who supplied the rations, nor did he think that that was a matter which concerned a private Member. It was one rather for the War Office. He now had information of a more or less reliable character that, as a matter of fact, a great portion of these rations were not really bad or unfit for human consumption when they were destroyed, and that quantities were eaten by the people of the locality without the slightest ill-effects. Remembering how thousands of people in this country and especially in Ireland found it difficult to find food for their children, he desired to know what means were taken to determine whether these rations were good or not, whether those means were such as to satisfy the authorities in South Africa that they were really bad, and whether any rumour had reached the Secretary of State to the effect that a large portion of these rations were hastily assumed to be unfit food. It was most deplorable and regrettable that food unfit for consumption should be sent out for our men who were risking their lives on the battle field, but it was almost criminal if food which was not unfit to he eaten had been destroyed in such vast quantities. They ought to have a frank and full statement from the Government on the subject.
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supported the suggestion that larger rations should be given to recruits, especially when drill and gymnastic exercises are being carried On together. It might be done with ease at recruit training depôts like Caterham, and with a little trouble he should think the difficulty could be overcome in regiments where the recruits mess with soldiers who have passed their drill.
said he would answer the hon. and gallant Member for St. George's Hanover Square, at once. He had complained that the recruit had not the same messing facilities as the trained soldier. He would ask the hon. and gallant Member to make a comparison between the position of the trained soldier in 1895 and at the present time. In 1895 the trained soldier had 1s. per day and 3d. for messing. The recruit had precisely the same conditions now as the trained soldier bad in 1895. Nine months after he reached the age of nineteen he now got 3d. for messing allowance and 2d. for stoppages. He thought the man who was serving his apprenticeship should be compelled to find something towards the education which was being given to him in order to fit him for his career. As they had done much to increase the pay of the soldier, and as next year there would come into force a still further payment from the State to the soldier, they hesitated about putting upon the country a still further burden by supplying the recruit with the extra money which would put him into the same position as the trained soldier. They were justified in saying that while he was a recruit he should be considered as serving his apprenticeship, and should be required to purchase any extra provisions he required, other than those allowed by the State. He agreed that it was desirable that, as far as possible, the recruit should be well fed, but he thought he should he required to find a certain amount of the extra nourishment while he was a recruit and not a trained soldier. With regard to the destruction of provisions in South Africa he would lay the whole case before the House. In the first place, the right hon. Gentleman had quoted a paragraph from a book written by Colonel Richardson. He did not know whether that book had been issued to the public or whether it had been published for private circulation, but he had not had the privilege of seeing it. He had made inquiries since that paragraph was read, and he could not find that Colonel Richardson had ever made any complaint officially to the War Office similar to that which he bad put into his book, which was written after he had left the Army. He could not help saying that this was rather hard upon those who were trying to meet the objections which were being put forward as the results of the late war. The purchase of preserved meat for South Africa was supervised in the following way. At nearly all the contractors' manufactories they had men expressly placed, not only to inspect the meat when it was being put into the tins but also to inspect it before it was prepared ready to put into the tins, and they were given full power to reject in any and every way anything which they thought undesirable. The goods when supplied were forwarded, for trans-shipment to South Africa, to Woolwich, and there the War Office had again inspectors who not only took out tins from any consignment for examination, but they also sent samples to the public analyst to be analysed not only for the quality but also for any deterioration of the contents of the tins, and an inspection of the tins and the material of the tins. There was not one single complaint from the analyst that either the tins or the meat were anything but what was considered up to the specification, and those were the most stringent conditions they could put upon any manufacturer. Therefore, he thought the Committee would hold that the War Office did all it possibly could to secure for the troops in South Africa and other places that when it left this country the preserved meat should be in the best condition that they could devise for preservation and for the use of the troops. In a matter like this the Committee should allow some line to be drawn between the responsibility of the War Office at home and the responsibility of those on the spot. As far as the War Office were concerned their sole duty must be, and should be, to try and get the best article, and be perfectly certain that the best article went out from this country in as perfect a condition as supervision could possibly secure. He maintained that the War Office did that. With regard to the destruction of the provisions in South Africa, he candidly confessed that he wished that more careful inspection had been made of those goods before they were summarily disposed of by the general officer in command. Reports came to him that, owing to the deterioration of the preserved rations, it was suspected that there was a certain amount of illness amongst the troops. He thereupon assembled a board, who took a percentage of the rations still in store, examined them, and on these examinations it was reported that the rations were in a state which necessitated their destruction. Upon that report the general officer commanding ordered the destruction of the whole lot. The hon. Member for East Clare had asked him a Question as to whether he had heard rumour that some of these rations ordered to be destroyed were taken away by the natives and eaten by them, and that no ill consequences arose. He was not perfectly certain that a thing which agreed with a native would always agree with an European, and therefore that argument did not weigh very much with him. The hon. Member for North Aberdeen read out a letter in the House in which it was stated that the natives had taken away some of this preserved meat, that they had eaten it, and that it had done them no harm. In this matter they had to place themselves in the position of the general officer commanding. He assembled a board which reported that the rations ought to be destroyed, and he had them destroyed. Even if he had a doubt in ins own mind that some of those rations were not as bad as the report of the samples made out, he had to consider whether it was worth the risk, in order merely to preserve perhaps an infinitesimal number of the rations, to risk the health of the troops under his command. That being so he accepted the responsibility which, personally, he wished he had accepted after a closer examination of the rations themselves; but, after all, it was a responsibility in regard to winch the House generally would hold that he exercised the wisest discretion in his power, and did what he thought was best for the troops under his command. He destroyed those rations, and there now arose the question of responsibility for their replacing, or any fine in lieu of replacement, a question which must he dealt with by them and by those who destroyed the rations. If there was any case where they could find negligence or shortcomings on the part of a contractor they would not allow him to escape from any liability. The House must understand that in these matters hon. Members must discriminate to a certain extent between rations so destroyed in time Of peace and rations destroyed in time of war. He said that more especially now, because with regard to these rations they had not previously had any complaint, nor did he find that the men who had the same kind of rations had ever made any formal complaint about them. It was a big trade and one which they must not depreciate except on the fairest grounds and after the closest examination. He therefore asked the House to realise that a tin of meat which might be perfectly good for two years when properly stored had not the same chance of deteriorating as the tins which had to go to the Tropics and he stored in all sorts of places, in all weathers, without shelter, sometimes in the damp, and sometimes in the blazing sun. Under those circumstances the meat had not the same chance as when stored at home. Some allowance must, therefore, be made for the conditions under which these provisions were stored, and possibly those were some of the various causes which might have helped the deterioration of these particular rations. At the same time they were making further inquiries into the matter. They had telegraphed for further particulars which had to be cleared up before they could deal with the manufacturers, but he repeated that, as far as they were concerned, they knew and believed that the provisions left this country in an absolutely good condition, and, as far as any legal rights they had got in regard to compensation were concerned, they were perfectly prepared and intended to insist upon them being upheld.
said the noble Lord had just stated that the Government were still making inquiries, but he had made one admission which completely justified the action taken by those who had drawn attention to this matter. He bad said that he considered that the general officer who ordered the destruction of these goods did so before he had made a good and sufficient inquiry. That was a serious statement and it put on the War Office the responsibility of taking some action with regard to the officers who ordered the destruction of tens of thousands of pounds worth of property without a sufficiently exhaustive inquiry. The noble Lord made another statement which, he thought, ought to shift the ground of the inquiry to some extent, from that altogether. The noble Lord said they were inquiring as to the responsibility of the contractors and that they had not come to a conclusion. That was so far satisfactory, but he wished to know whether the noble Lord would make an inquiry as to the officers. The noble Lord stated that the most scrupulous examination imaginable was made of the goods before they left England; first of all they were inspected while in the process of manufacturing, and secondly at Woolwich before they were shipped. Within a few months of the examination by these officers they were again examined by another set of officers in Pretoria, and whereas the officers at the factories and at Woolwich passed the goods as perfectly sound, the other officers condemned them as bad. That was an extraordinary state of affairs. He thought the War Office were bound to inquire very closely into the suitability of the officers who made these inquiries, both in South Africa and in England, because to most people it would seem a very unlikely thing that goods which were passed in England should, within a few months, be condemned in South Africa. The presumption was that one of these two sets of officers did not do their duty. The noble Lord said that allowance must be made for climatic considerations, but that, he thought, would not hold water for a single moment. He believed that the contractors themselves, if they were asked, would repudiate the idea that any climatic influences could have such an effect upon tinned goods of this description, if they were properly tinned. There was no reason why they should be exposed to the sun in Pretoria. The noble Lord would find, if he inquired, what they all knew, that the serious part of this matter was that a large portion of the goods were examined and condemned within a few months of their arrival in South Africa. That was an unusual state of affairs. One could understand tins which had been knocking about for years in all kinds of weather and places deteriorating, but the serious matter was that many of the tins which were ordered to be destroyed had only just arrived in South Africa. Were the two sets of officers who made the examination to be passed by scot free? Was there to be no inquiry as to their fitness? Were the Committee to be told their names, and were they medical men? What process did they put the food under in order to examine it? This was as serious a matter almost as any case that might be made out with reference to the culpability of the contractors themselves. There must be fault and blame somewhere, and He would ask the noble Lord to say whether careful inquiry would be made, not only with regard to the contractors, but the officers. The noble Lord had said that this was the first time complaints had been made with regard to rations of this description. He heard the statement was a little surprise, because the information he had received did not tally with it. Did the noble lord say now that, outside of these rations which were destroyed in Pretoria a few months ago, no complaint had been made with reference to any of the rations supplied either to the Army or the Navy? He had received a contrary statement, and he should be very glad to hear that it was not true.
joined the hon. Member for East Clare in expressing surprise at the statement made by the noble Lord that the tinned meat destroyed at Pretoria was the first lot of which he had heard any complaint. He remembered that a couple of years ago he wrote to the War Office on behalf of some canteen contractors whose goods were returned from Cape Town. He thought that a word from the noble Lord would rehabilitate some of the canteen contractors who had smarted a good deal under the condemnation they suffered. He asked the Secretary of State for War two years ago whether there were any contracts for canned meats going to Canadian contractors because he knew that there were a great I many going to American contractors. His right hon. friend informed him that the Canadian contract goods were very inferior indeed, and that some of them had to be returned to Canada, He then made some representations to the Colonial Office because it seemed to him very hard that the Canadian contractors should be excluded altogether, perhaps on account of the wrongdoing of two or three contractors in Canada. He understood that when the goods were sent back to Canada a small committee examined them, and the report that reached him was that they found there had been some considerable mistake. A great many of the packages had never been opened, and they were quite as good when returned to Montreal as when they were sent out. There was naturally a good deal of soreness felt by the Canadian contractors who thought they had not, on the whole, been very well treated as compared with American contractors who had done nothing at all for us in the course of the war. He wished to know whether it was under some misapprehension that these goods were returned.
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said that the matter now before the Committee was a question of money, but so far as the soldiers were concerned, it was a question of food and not of pay. Every soldier paid 3d. per day out of Iris pay towards extra messing, and in addition to that the old soldier got this messing allowance of 3d. per day, but it did not go into his pocket at all. The old soldier got the benefit of extra messing which the recruit did not get. Three years ago he was commanding a reserve regiment, and it so happened that there were not enough old soldiers to form the regiment. He had 200 old soldiers and 300 recruits. These 200 were ex-soldiers, who came back to serve with the colours in response to the appeals which were made, and they received their extra messing allowance. In a good many cases their waist measurement was considerably larger than their chest measurement, but with the recruits the measurements were the other way. It was the recruits who wanted the extra messing, and he hoped his right hon. friend would do something to meet this requirement.
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said he was surprised to hear the statement made by the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Forest of Dean, about tinned rations for the Army. He had the pleasure of meeting Sir Wodehouse Richardson, whom the right hon. Gentleman quoted, at his request, and particularly discussed the question of meat rations. His words to him were to the effect that he had had considerable practical experience of Maconochie's tinned rations, and that he found they were perfectly satisfactory. He said that what he desired was a square tin and a better method of opening it than by knife. The hon. Member did not think that this discussion, whatever might come out of it, would be for the benefit of the manufacturers of this country or the working classes, unless they could show that it was no new thing for this ration to be praised and not blamed, and that it had been in use for many years. The Times correspondent, writing from Merawi in September, 1897, said—
On February 12th, 1897, referring to the Ashanti expedition, the Allahabad Poineer stated—"It is fortunate that officers and correspondents are not dependent on this country for provisions. We came up well supplied with stores, and ni my opinion a Maconochie Army ration of tinned beef or mutton is far more palatable than the fresh meat we purchase here."
The British Medical Journal, the Daily Chronicle, the Lancet, the Daily News and the Pioneer bore testimony to similar effect. The hon. Member said he had a host of extracts from letters of soldiers at the from praising this particular form of food. Under these circumstances, he thought it was only fair to ask that the manufacturers should tar given the benefit of the doubt and not be condemned when there was not a single service Member in the House, who was at the war, who had not expressed appreciation of the Maconochie Army ration."Maconochie field rations, which I think I have mentioned to you before, have gained golden opinions in the late Ashanti expedition."
asked whether arrangements could he made for rations being put up in smaller tins than was done during the last war. It was very inconvenient to have seven-pound tins of rations, and smaller quantities would be more serviceable.
said his hon. friend had mentioned this matter of the size of rations as soon as he came back from South Africa, and he was glad to be able to state that steps would be taken to ensure that that they would be made up in smaller quantities in future. In regard to the remarks of his hon. friend the Member for Stowmarket in regard to canned meat obtained from Canada, he had to say that this meat was condemned by the officers appointed by Lord Kitchener who examined it at Cape Town. The committee were not satisfied. The sample was divided into two parts—one being sent to Woolwich and the other to Montreal for examination. Professsor Robertson of Canada was allowed to be present at the examination. At Montreal they were satisfied that the meat was quite good. At Woolwich, which, after all, was the place which must know more about the matter, they were not at all satisfied. They said that the meat was not good, that it was composed in great part of gristle and they unhesitatingly condemmed the sample. In that respect it might be said that those who were unbiassed at home confirmed the opinion of those in South Africa, and that as a matter of fact the officers appointed by Lord Kitchener were perfectly right. In saying that unless there was a distinct improvement they could not continue employing these Canadian firms whose goods had been condemmed, it must be understood that where Canadian contractors endeavoured to act up to the War Office specification there would be every inclination to give them the same opportunity for contracting as was given to foreign countries. Therefore, there was not the slightest bias on the part of the War Office against the Canadian manufacturers. In regard to what was said as to making the meals of the soldiers more palatable in the sense of affording improved accommodation, they were doing what they said in the way of providing separate dining rooms and in making the dinner more of a real dinner and less of a picnic than formerly. It had improved, and if there was a way of improving it farther without involving large expense on the nation, he would be only too glad to receive any proposals and recommend them fm approval. He thought that the hon. Member for Clare had misconstrued his words. What the hon. Member said was that he was not satisfied that there had been a sufficiently good inquiry. What he had said was that he could have wished that there had been a larger percentage than one per cent., but that they did not know what other reasons—there might have been many—influenced the committee in the decision they arrived at. In regard to what the hon. Member said about officers not doing their duty, he could not, in any way, agree with it.
said he did not say that the officers did not do their duty. He only asked the noble Lord whether an inquiry would be held into the unusual fact that, whereas one set of officers at Woolwich and the factories said that the goods were perfectly good and sound, another set of officers in South Africa decided exactly the reverse. There must be something wrong there.
said that that did not at all follow. It must be remembered that a few months intervened between the two examinations, during which there was every sort of change of climate, atmosphere and condition. It might be a matter for consideration whether the War Office requirements as to the goods being manufactured with sufficient care, so as to preserve the meat during these months and provide against all changes of climate which might intervene, had been fulfilled.
asked for how long these tinned rations were expected to hold good; whether any guarantee as to length of time was given with them; or whether hey were bought on the understanding that within a few months under such conditions they might be expected to turn bad.
said that there was a guarantee for two years, and that was what made him say that he thought there might be a legal liability to make good the loss on the part of the manufacturers. He was not in a position to state fully when these tins did arrive in South Africa. He might ease the minds of those who thought that these preserved rations were neither good nor palatable by saying that his friend the Secretary to the Admiralty asked the Navy officials their opinion of the tinned rations, and the reply was, that the condemnation of tinned meats for the Navy was very small, and did not average more than ·351 per cent. of the total stocks per annum. The Committee would therefore see that when the War Office selected these particular preserved rations for the Army, they had, at all events, a good basis for believing they had got a good article for the Army in the field.
asked if the noble Lord could inform the Committee what proportion of the condemned rations were in soldered tins and what only in sealed tins.
said he had no information at present, but that was one of the points they were dealing with.
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asked if there were not 1,150,000 soldered tins and about 550,000 or 600,000 unsoldered.
said he would endeavour to get the information.
said he wished to press this point, because it would be of use in the future to know the proportion of soldered and sealed tins. He suspected that the soldered tins were infinitely the better.
said he dared say they were, and if he could get the information before evening he would give it to the Committee.
asked if the result of the inquiry would not be given in Papers to be laid before the House.
said he did not think it would be necessary to publish Papers. The information could be given in answer to Questions.
said he did not blame the noble Lord, because he had given the Committee all the information he could, but this was a matter which he was perfectly justified in raising. He did not know whether other Members came in contact, as he did, with the very poor classes of the population both in Ireland and this country, who could hardly find the means of subsistence and who were absolutely in a state of want and misery; and when they were told that £80,000 worth of food had been destroyed, either wrongly or because it was bad, it was a shocking state of things which ought to be thoroughly inquired into.
*
said he wished to point out that the reply of the noble Lord was most unsatisfactory, because he talked of the recruit being entitled to tins or that. It was not a question of what he was entitled to, but of State policy. They ought to attend to the point which the recruits themselves said was the greatest difficulty in the way of recruiting. There was a very general belief that the shortness of food was the difficulty in the way of recruiting at the present time. The principle laid down by the Admiralty Committee was sound, that the State ought to give that which a man needed in the shape of food. At present the State did not give him that.
said he could assure the right hon. Gentleman that he was not in the least insensible to the appeal he made; but he asked the Committee to follow the course of the concessions which had been made, under the influence of the right hon. Gentleman, in order to avoid the difficulties to which allusion had been made. It was only six years ago, and then the trained soldier had 1s. a day pay, out of which he paid 3d. for messing and 2d. for stoppages. In order to add to the attractions of the service and to give the man more money in his pocket at the end of the week, the War Office induced the Committee to vote an extra 3d. to every man who had completed his recruit drill. That limitation was put for two reasons. First, it was urged that it was not fair to expect a man to go on serving after he had come to his full strength, and to a full knowledge of Ins work, at the same rate of pay as was given to the boy who had not his full strength or full trained ability. And second, because they were urged to establish a difference between the two classes. Again, the War Office obtained the permission of the Committee in 1901 to make a further very large concession, and give every soldier 2d. a day to carry stoppages. Then, next April, every soldier who had two years service would get 6d. a day on re-engagement. In other words, the trained soldier had formerly a pay of 1s. a day, then he had 1s. 5d., and soon he would have 1s. 11d.; and the difference between what he had in his pocket on a Saturday night would be 7d. a day formerly and 1s. now; and between 7d. a day formerly and 1s. 6d. soon, or an increase of nearly 150 per cent. He was more anxious than any man alive to see contentment produced in the Army; and he had done more than any man living to induce the Committee to agree to supply the wants of the soldier. It was now said, because they had done so much for the trained soldier, that they were damaging the position of the recruit. As regarded what was said by his hon. friend the Member for the Fareham Division, he recognised to the full the desirability of improving what he might call the attraction of the dining arrangements in barracks. The present Commander-in-Chief had given a great deal of attention to this subject, and. in this connection, the great expense which they had asked the State to incur in order to provide dining rooms should not be forgotten. They had now obviated the necessity of men dining in their sleeping rooms, or, in the case of cavalry regiments, over stables. He hoped his hon. and gallant friend would
AYES.
| ||
| Barran, Rowland Hirst | Hayter, Rt. Hon. Sir Aurthur D. | Spencer, Rt Hn C.R. (Northants |
| Buchanan, Thomas Ryburn | Henderson, Arthur (Durham) | Sullivan, Donal |
| Burns, John | Jacoby, James Alfred | Thomson, F. W. (York, W.R. |
| Burt, Thomas | Labouchere, Henry | Trevelyan, Charles Philips |
| Caldwell, James | Lawson, Sir Wilfrid (Cornwall | Ure, Alexander |
| Campbell, John (Armagh, S.) | Levy, Maurice | Wallace, Robert |
| Channing, Francis Allston | Lough, Thomas | Wason, E. (Clackmannan) |
| Crooks William | Lundon, W. | Weir, James Galloway |
| Davies, Alfred (Carmarthen) | Mappin, Sir Frederick Thorpe | White, Luke (York, E.R.) |
| Delany, William | Mitchell, Edw. (Fermanagh, N. | Whitley, J. H. (Halifax) |
| Dewar, John A. (Inverness-sh.) | Morley, Rt. John (Montrose | Wilson, Henry J. (York, W. R |
| Dilke, Rt. Hon. Sir Charles | Nolan, Col. John P.(Galway, N. | Yoxall, James Henry |
| Emmott, Alfred | O'Brien, P.J. (Tipperary, N.) | |
| Griffith, Ellis J. | Partington, Oswald | TELLERS FOR THE AYES— |
| Gurdon, Sir W. Brampton | Shackleton, David James | Mr. Fuller and Mr. Bell. |
| Hayne, Rt. Hn. Charles Seale- | Sinclair, John (Forfarshire) | |
NOES.
| ||
| Anson, Sir William Reynell | Atkinson, Rt. Hon. John | Baird, John George Alexander |
| Arkwright, John Stanhope | Bagot, Capt. Josceline FitzRoy | Balcarres, Lord |
| Arnold-Forster, Hugh O. | Bailey, James (Walworth) | Balfour, Rt. Hn. A. J. (Manch'r |
not find it necessary to proceed to a division. If he did, he would find in the lobby against him many who sympathised to the full with the object he had in view, and who had done all they could to carry it out. In his opinion, the Committee would be well advised to wait and see the effect of the new conditions before they approved of further heavy charges being incurred.
*
said he felt some hesitation in withdrawing, because he felt very strongly in this matter. However, he quite appreciated all his right hon. friend had done for the Army; and he would again press upon him the great necessity of treating recruits well. He thought it was a pity that when the alterations in pay were made the question of the pay of recruits was not also taken into consideration. He quite understood that a recruit was an apprentice and should not be paid as well as a trained soldier; but he hoped the matter would not be lost sight of, and that some day or other the recruit would be better fed than he was at present.
*
said he hoped the hon. Gentleman would not think him discourteous, but many hon. Members felt strongly in the matter, and would have to press for a division.
Question put.
The Committee divided, Ayes, 44; Noes, 110. (Division list No. 206.)
| Balfour, Rt. Hn. G. W. (Leeds | Harris, Frederick Leverton | Reid, James (Greenock) |
| Banbury, Sir Frederick George | Haslett, Sir. James Horner | Ropner, Colonel Sir Robert |
| Blundell, Colonel Henry | Heath, Arthur H. (Hanley) | Rutherford, John (Lancashire) |
| Brodrick, Rt. Hon. St. John | Heath, James (Staffs, N. W.) | Sandys, Lt.-Col. Thos. Myles |
| Burdett-Coutts, W. | Heaton, John Henniker | Scott, Sir S. (Marylebone, W.) |
| Campbell, J. H. M. (Dublin Univ | Hogg, Lindsay | Sharpe, William Edward T. |
| Carson, Rt. Hon. Sir Edw. H. | Howard, J. (Midd., Tottenham | Shaw-Stewart, M. H. (Renfrew) |
| Cavendish, V.C.W.(Derbyshire | Kemp, Lieut.-Col. George | Sinclair, Louis (Romford) |
| Chamberlain, Rt. Hn. J. (Birm | Kenyon, Hon. G. T. (Denbigh | Smith, Jas. Parker (Lanarks. |
| Chamberlain, Rt. Hn. J A (Worc | Lambton, Hon. Fredk. Wm. | Smith, Hn. W. F. D. (Strand) |
| Chapman, Edward | Lawson, John Grant (Yorks. NR | Stanley, Hon. A. (Ormskirk) |
| Coghill, Douglas Harry | Lee, Arthur H. (Hants. Fareham | Stanley, E. Jas. (Somerset) |
| Corbett, T. L. (Down, North) | Lees, Sir Elliott (Birkenhead) | Stanley, Lord (Lanes.) |
| Craig, Charles Curtis (Antrim, S | Leveson-Gower, Frederick N.S. | Stroyan, John |
| Cranborne, Viscount | Lockwood, Lieut.-Col. A. R. | Talbot, Lord E. (Chichester |
| Crossley, Rt. Hn. Sir Savile | Loder, Gerald, Walter Erskine | Thornton, Percy M. |
| Davenport, William Bromley | Lonsdale, John Brownlee | Tomlinson, Sir Wm. E. M. |
| Dickson, Charles Scott | Lucas, Reg'ld J. (Portsmouth) | Tritton, Charles Ernest |
| Douglas, Rt. Hon, A. Akers | Lyttelton, Hon. Alfred | Valentia, Viscount |
| Elliot, Hon. A. Ralph Douglas | Macdona, John Cumming | Walrond, Rt. Hon. Sir W. H. |
| Fellowes, Hon. Ailwyn Edward | Maxwell, W. J. H. (Dumfriessh. | Warde, Colonel C. E. |
| Fergusson, Rt Hn. Sir J. (Man'r | Melville, Beresford Valentine | Whiteley, H.(Ashton-u.-Lyne) |
| Finlay, Sir Robert Bannatyne | Morton, Arthur H. Aylmer | Williams, Rt Hn J. Powell (Birm |
| Fisher, William Hayes | Murray, Rt Hn A. Graham (Bute | Wills, Sir Frederick |
| Fitzroy, Hon. Edward Algernon | Murray, Charles J. (Coventry | Wilson-Todd, Sir W. H. (Yorks |
| Flannery, Sir Fortescue | Murray, Col. Wyndham (Bath) | Wodehouse, Rt Hn. E. R. (Bath) |
| Flower, Ernest | Palmer, Walter (Salisbury) | Worsley-Taylor, Henry Wilson |
| Forster, Henry William | Parker, Sir Gilbert | Wortley, Rt. Hn. C. B. Stuart |
| Gardner, Ernest | Pease, Herb. Pike (Darlington | Wyndham, Rt. Hon. George |
| Gordon, Hn J E (Elgin and N'rn | Peel, Hn Wm. Robert Wellesley | Wyndham-Quin, Major W. H. |
| Gordon, J. (Londonderry, S) | Percy, Earl | Yerburgh, Robt. Armstrong |
| Gore, Hn G. R. C. Ormsby-(Salop | Plummer, Walter R. | |
| Gore, Hon. S. F. Ormbhy-(Lincs. | Pretyman, Ernest George | TELLERS FOR THE NOES— |
| Gorst, Rt. Hn. Sir John Eldon | Purvis, Robert | Sir Alexander Acland- |
| Guest, Hon. Ivor Churchill | Rattigan, Sir William Henry | Hood and Mr. Anstruther. |
Original Question again proposed.
*
said that before the Vote was finally taken be wished to ask a few Questions. In the first place, he wished to know why the amount paid for advertisements in newspapers had nearly trebled. Then, with reference to the contribution of the Transvaal to the Government or supplies requisitioned during the war, he apprehended that that was a final payment for all goods supplied during the var. A Question was asked the other day as to the delay in paying for these supplies; but the Colonial Secretary replied that that was due to swindling demands. He should like to know whether the new check system, under which both purchaser and vendor signed, was or was not a success.
said that with reference to the increase in the amount paid for advertisements in newspapers, it arose from several causes. One was advertisements for recruits; another was connected with manœuvres; and a third was with reference to contracts, as they now endeavoured, as far as possible, to give information to the country generally as to War Office requirements, whether at home or abroad. All these resulted in an increase, which he hoped would, however, be justified, and, to a certain extent, recouped, as a result of greater competition. He was afraid he could not as yet give any information as to the practical result of the new check system; but they had every reason to suppose that it would prevent not only fraudulent demands but fraudulent receipts being given in any future war in which this country might be unhappily engaged. As regards practical results, however, they had as yet no experience
said he wished to ask a Question with regard to special allowances. As he understood the matter, under the King's Regulations, when officers and men were under canvas they had certain special allowances given to them. Certain regiments were now serving in South Africa, which were not, it was true, tinder canvas, although in ordinary circumstances they would be under canvas. They were housed in disused tin huts erected during the war for remount and other departments. It appeared to him it was quite as essential that special allowances should be given to the officers and men stationed in these huts, as if they were under canvas. Any other interpretation of the regulations appeared to him to savour of red tape. If these officers and men were for purposes of economy and convenience not put under canvas, but in buildings which corresponded to canvas, surely it would be enforcing the letter of the law rather too strictly to deprive them of allowances to which they would otherwise be entitled. Great dissatisfaction resulted from the refusal of these allowances; and he hoped the Secretary of State for War would pay attention to the matter.
said he wished to ask a question about the £50,000 which was put down for stores for China and Somaliland. He wished to know why stores were required for China this year, and with regard to Somaliland, he desired to ask if the suns now taken would be sufficient.
said that with regard to the Question of the hon. Gentleman the Member for East Perthshire, his sympathies were entirely with the officers and men who were at present serving in South Africa, where the cost of living was extremely high. The question of allowances to officers was under consideration, and communications were passing between the War Office and the general officer commanding in South Africa with a view to seeing what could be done to decrease the very large expense of officers stationed in South Africa. With regard to the China Expeditionary Force, the amount was asked for for the purpose of repayment to India, and also for the cost of the force still in China. With reference to the Somaliland expedition, he was afraid that the question raised by the hon. Gentleman would give rise to a discussion which would not be in order on this particular Vote.
said he thought his question was perfectly in order. He wished to know whether the sum now asked for for forage and other supplies in Somaliland would be sufficient, or whether it would he necessary to ask for a supplementary Vote.
said that if £50,000 was not sufficient they would, of course, ask for a supplementary Estimate.
asked if the right hon. Gentleman would state whether in his opinion the amount was or was not sufficient.
said he merely wished to know if the amount taken was in the opinion of the War Office sufficient. He thought that was a very reasonable question.
said his difficulty in giving figures arose from the fact that reinforcements for Somaliland had been sent from India, and some time must necessarily elaspe before they could ascertain what the Estimate required would be likely to be. If necessary, they would come to the House for a supplementary grant.
Question put, and agreed to.
2. £907,000, Militia: Pay, Bounty, etc.
said he wished to direct attention to the position of the Militia battalions who went to South Africa. They numbered 180,000 officers and men, and, as far as he understood, the battalions which went out in 1901 and 1902 received very little recognition for their services. He himself thought that rewards were given with too free a hand, and that their value was accordingly diminished, but if the rewards had been too freely given, that in itself" militated against the position of the Militia regiments which responded to the call the country made on them. Six battalions went out in 1901. One commanding officer was either killed in action or had since died; and of the remaining five commanding officers, four received the Civil C.B. Why an officer engaged in war should be awarded the Civil C.B. he did not know. But the fifth commanding officer did not receive any recognition whatever. In 1902 fifteen battalions went out, but neither officers nor noncommissioned officers nor men received any recognition. Therefore it amounted to this—that the only recognition given by a grateful country to the twenty-one Militia battalions that went out was four Civil C.B.'s. He was aware that that had occasioned the gravest dissatisfaction in the Militia; and that the regiments considered that their services had not been properly recognised. The Militia had fought on a great many hard fields, and had always distinguished themselves; and they felt very strongly that the recognition they had received for their services during the late war was anything but generous; and there was a strong feeling that further recognition should be given.
said there was a strong feeling abroad that the war services of the Militia had been imperfectly recognised. He also protested against the award of Civil C.B.'s to officers of the old constitutional force. One of the great difficulties at present was to secure competent officers to enter the Militia, Yeomanry, and Volunteers, and gentlemen would certainly not be encouraged to come forward if it was felt that their services would be somewhat inadequately recognised. He believed it was the feeling of a large section of the officers of the force, that in connection with the late war their services had been lightly considered, and when the matter was fully understood the Secretary of State for War would probably be the first to recognise the fact.
said he was grateful to the hon. Member for Chester, and the hon. Member for Bootle, for bringing this matter forward. The subject had been discussed for months past in the military and other papers, but, as was the case with many matters on which he could throw light, he was unable to enter into the controversy unless the subject was considered of sufficient importance to be brought up in the House of Commons. In connection with this matter an entirely false impression had been created in the Militia, and much criticism, for which there was no foundation, had been directed against the War Office. The desire had been to do everything possible, consistently with justice, for those who had volunteered. But justice had, of course, to be done to the Regular Army, and in estimating the awards it was impossible for the Commander-in-Chief—first Lord Roberts and afterwards Lord Kitchener—to put forward the names of men who had not seen as much service in South Africa as officers of the Regular Army, who for three years had been risking their lives. People hardly appreciated what had been done for the Militia in this matter. There was an idea abroad that in the issue of decorations the Militia had been greatly neglected. Setting aside the twenty-two battalions which went out at the end of 1901, there were 121 distinctions awarded to Militia officers alone, viz., sixteen Companionships of the Order of the Bath, twenty-five Companionships of the Order of St. Michael and St. George, and seventy-five Distinguished Service Orders. To be absolutely fair to the Militia, it should be said that eighteen out of the seventy-five were adjutants, who in most cases belonged to the Regular Army, arid should therefore be deducted from the figures for the Militia. Seeing, how ever, that over a hundred distinctions had been given to the Militia, although many battalions were in South Africa for a shorter period than battalions of the Line, the Committee would probably agree that there had been no intentional neglect on the part of the War Office.
asked, in order to complete the comparison, how many decorations and awards were given to the Yeomanry and Volunteers.
said he could not give the figures off-hand, but it should be remembered that, by reason of the composition of the force, the Yeomanry were continually on trek and under fire, while many of the Militia battalions, although they did extremely useful work in blockhouses and on the lines of communication, were from the circumstances not nearly so often in contact with the enemy, and officers who had been on trek for a year or a year and a half naturally came under the eye of the Commander-in-Chief, or were reported oftener than officers occupied in more stationary duties. With regard to the twenty-two battalions which went out at the end of 1901, their service began in December, negotiations commenced in March or April, 1902, and peace was declared on June 1st. The longest period that any of these battalions served under campaign conditions was three months, whereas, when Lord Kitchener came to make out his recommendations, there were many officers whose service under campaign conditions extended over three or three and a half years. Lord Kitchener came to the conclusion, for which the War Office were not in any way responsible, that he could not mention in his dispatches the officers of regiments which, having gone c at last, had not had the opportunity of service that others had had. Lord Roberts and he (the Secretary of State) had been accused of partiality because these officers had not been given decorations, but it was out of their power to do anything more than they had done, as they could recommend to His Majesty only such officers as had been recommended by the General in the field. His hon. friend had asked why Civil C.B.'s had been awarded. Her late Majesty was advised to give annually a certain number of Civil distinctions to officers in the Militia, Yeomanry and Volunteers. The whole of these distinctions were strictly limited by statute, and only vacancies could be filled up. This year there were four vacancies, and on the recommendation of Lord Roberts the four commanding officers to whom reference had been made were put forward to fill them. Everything, therefore, that the War Office could do had been done. Their one idea had been to recognise in the fullest manner the services of the Auxiliary forces, and it was a matter of deep regret that there should be any idea that those services had been deliberately passed over. During the voyage home Lord Kitchener personally went through list after list and considered the case of each officer individually. No doubt mistakes had been made; it was inevitable in such cases that some men should come more prominently before the General's notice than others; but the Committee might be assured that both in the overhauling of Lord Kitchener's recommendations and in the original discrimination the greatest care was exercised with an intense desire to do what was right by all concerned. In the particular case of the Militia, nothing inure than had been, could be done without injustice to others, Hundreds of officers had been named by their superiors without finding their way to the Commander-in-Chief's dispatches. He keenly sympathised with those men, but he was powerless to help them, and when it was stated that in connection with the war 2,800 honours and promotions had been recommended to His Majesty, the Committee would recognise that the War Office had not been niggardly in their endeavour to recognise services rendered under difficult circumstances by a large body of troops.
asked whether there was any reason why military C.B.'s should not have been given to military officers for military services. Civil C.B.'s might possibly be given to Volunteer officers, but he contended that Militia officers were entitled for military services to receive military decorations.
said he should be very sorry to propose to change what he believed had been one of the greatest safeguards against favouritism, viz., the rule that no officer could obtain the military C.B. who had not been mentioned in despatches. That applied to every Regular officer, and pro tanto must guide the procedure with regard to Militia officers. The nearer the Militia is to the Regular officer the mope important is it that the same rules should apply to the bestowal of decorations.
*
said that they on that side of the House fully sympathised with the desire of the hon. Members, who had spoken, to improve the efficiency and content of the Militia force. But a stronger advocate than anybody on that side of the House was the Secretary of State for War himself, who, on March 4 of last year, said:—
He thought those were most excellent provisions, for they gave the double advantage both to the Militia and the Line, that young men competent to perform regimental duties should for a certain time be attached to a Line regiment. But in the month of June, according to the Returns, no less than thirty-seven officers resigned Militia commissions in one single Gazette. The officers on the establishment numbered 3,667, but the total now stood at 2,812, showing a deficiency of 885 officers in the Militia service. That was a very serious thing, and therefore everything that was possible should be done to increase the attractions in the Militia. What was the state of the rank and file? The total was 138,000 on the establishment, but there were 20,596 short on January 1st this year. That was an enormous shortage, and it required the serious attention of the military authorities to make up the deficiency. No less than 9,200 had been lost through desertion, and it was a large increase upon preceding years. One or two steps might certainly be taken. He could not understand why no Militia officers were ever thought good enough tube adjutants of their Militia regiments. Whenever there was a vacancy, it was filled up by some captain in the affiliated Line regiment, and Militia officers never seemed to obtain those very valuable prizes. He doubted very much if there was the same system prevailing amongst the non-commissioned officers and men of granting long service and good conduct medals as in other arms. They could not qualify in the same way as other forces and that was a grievance which ought to be remedied. After twenty years service a medal was granted to Volunteers, but the privilege had never been granted to the Militia. The right hon. Gentleman said in March this year that—"We are going to do what we can to encourage Militia officers. (1.) In the first place we shall give every year a certain number an opportunity of serving with the Line regiments, in order that they may have the benefit of the training, and also to enable Line regiments to have additional officers at these periods of the year. (2.) We intend to continue the system of entering the Army through the Militia. (3.) We recommend for this year the establishment of a Militia reserve of 50,000 men, who have already served in the Militia or completed their reserve service in the Line."
He thought they would have to recognise one or two things with regard to their service. With regard to the camp on Salisbury Plain, the great necessity in the case of young soldiers was to relieve them of all unnecessary fatigue, and great care should be taken that the whole of the time they were out should be spent improving their shooting and their drill. He wished to say that on this side of the House they did not yield in any degree to the other in their admiration for the Militia, and they were ready to do all they could to remove any discontent from the old constitutional force."The Militia has done far more for the Regular Army during the late campaign than anybody could have expected of them. We are determined that the old constitutional force shall not be pressed out between the Regulars and Volunteers."
*
said it fell upon him, as there was no other Militia officer present, to say what were the feelings of both officers and men in that branch of the service upon this question. He desired to represent to his right hon. friend what had been laid before him with the justification of very high military authority, namely, the inadvisability of sending Militia battalions to train every year at Salisbury Plain. If they were told that Salisbury Plain was the only possible place where troops could be trained, that would be a very difficult case to answer, but as his right hon. friend the Member for Walsall had intimated, the situation at Salisbury Plain was very different from what some people who had never been there might imagine. It was so cut up with rifle ranges that it was almost impossible to go anywhere without being shot. They could not extend troops anywhere without marching at least three miles, and, as long as the musketry was going on, they had very little more room to teach young soldiers the elementary part of their training than they had at Wellington Barracks. It was, of course, a great advantage to a battalion to have ample rifle accommodation on the ranges so as to get through their musketry rapidly, and leave more time for field training and so forth, but even when a battalion had been put through its shooting, other battalions were using the ranges, and consequently it was almost as much tied to the camp. Then having done their day's work, there was really nothing whatever on Salisbury Plain to reconcile a soldier to his lot, or to encourage enlistment. He was, not advocating the pampering of the. Militia, but they must bear in mind that the Militia were civilians and not a Volunteer force, and if they did not want to pamper them at all events they did want to encourage them and give them some inducement to the military service, and they certainly ought not to throw any discouragement in their way. On Salisbury Plain there was nothing whatever to do. The ground did not permit of any recreation except a game of football, which might be a good game in winter but was a bad game in summer. There was nothing to look at except a few trees, and nothing ever happened except perhaps when al man came with a cart of oranges. And therefore the lot of those who had not antiquarian tastes and no great love of walking caused them to become so bored as to be almost demoralised. He was speaking not only of officers but of men. They disliked the life so much that he was prepared to prove that recruiting was already falling off, and the numbers would be seriously diminished. There was another reason why men disliked going on Salisbury Plain every year. Many of them, who were men of business, thought it was a great convenience—almost a necessity—that in the course of their training they should be able to go home on Sundays, or whenever an opportunity occurred, to attend to their business. He was much struck this year with the large number of men who availed themselves of the opportunity of bank holiday occurring to go home, but many of them found it impossible to be back in time, and therefore lost a day's pay. But they were so anxious to go home that they were prepared to make that sacrifice. Let it be understood that their own counties were the proper places for Militia training. Such a rule would be not only a legitimate advantage and benefit to the men but a material inducement to renewed interest in the battalions, that would tend to the improvement of recruiting.
*
said that there was a battalion which numbered over 1,000 men when he was connected with it, and which always used to have a list of men ready to come on when they were required. He was sorry to say that that number had now come down to something like 400 men. At the suggestion of the Commanders of the Forces in Scotland the deputy-lieutenants were called together to consider what was the cause of this great falling off, and they had testimony that one great fault was the system of drilling recruits at the regimental Line depôts instead of by their own officers at the preliminary training. When they went to the depôts inducements were held out to them to join the Line, and out of 200 recruits only some thirty-five came back to the battalion. Some were induced to join the affiliated Line regiment; a good many disappeared. It seemed to him that that fact alone accounted for a considerable falling off in the strength of that regiments, because in the adjoining counties where there were no Line depôts, their regiments were full and remained full, and there was not the same constant inducement for them to go into the Line. It was a most expensive way of getting recruits first to enrol them in the Militia and then to give them a bounty to go to the Line. That was the system which was still going on, and it was not surprising that there should be a diminution in numbers. Something had been said of the dulness of the conditions of life in camp. That dulness was experienced by the Regular soldiers equally. He thought it was for the advantage of the Army that troops should be trained in larger bodies than formerly, and under a thoroughly regular system. There was no doubt, however, that in the camps there was a great absence of amusement, and consequently much diminished attraction to the ranks. He had had conversations with old soldiers of great experience, who were exceedingly anxious for the welfare of the Army, and they said that in these camps there should be buildings where the troops could have I amuse men s greater than could be afforded by the canteens and other regimental rooms. Such buildings, capable of seating 1,000, had been erected at some stations at the cost of £3,000, and if that could be done in other places there would be amusement in the evenings. These buildings could be utilised as drill halls and for various military purposes, while they would attract theatrical and music-hall companies. He thought the suggestion made to him by these old soldiers was a very valuable one.
*
said that the number at present actually serving was 115,000; that meant a diminution on the establishment, but it was very little different from what it was a few years ago. The most difficult point was with regard to officers. They must hope that the Royal Commission which was now sitting might, if it.did not find a remedy, recommend sweeping changes in the constitution of the Militia and Volunteers. If they did not make very large proposals he hoped they would find some means of coping with the position with regard to officers. He should like to ask two Questions. One of them concerned the recent change in the Jersey Militia. The change made some time ago in the Guernsey Militia was fully satisfactory. The change in the Jersey Militia had been made much more slowly, and he wished to know what was the position of matters there. It was quite possible that his Question might be premature. The other Question was one which he was sure the Secretary of State would be glad to give information upon if he could. It referred to the position of the Militia field artillery. On this Vote this year they had an increase from 432 men to 1,298 for the Militia field artillery. That trebling of the Militia field artillery ought to lead the Committee to ask how far the War Office were satisfied, so far as they had gone, with that force. They must remember that they were relying upon the Militia field artillery to a considerable extent. Two years ago the Secretary of State for War said this force was necessary to complete his Army Corps scheme. Since that time certain modifications of his scheme had been made, and the House had been led to suppose that it was the intention of the Government to strengthen still further the field artillery. They had a right to ask what had been the result of the experiment up to the present.
supported the suggestion made by the right hon. Gentleman the Member for North East Manchester in regard to the desirability of providing accommodation for amusements. At Salisbury such a building as had been suggested was erected at a cost of £3,000, and billiard tables and various amusements of that kind were provided.
asked the right hon. Gentleman to give some information as to the present state of the Militia reserve. He believed that the Militia reserve was non-existent, but the War Office were taking a sum on this Vote for the expenses and pay of the Militia reserve.
said he was at Salisbury Plain with a Volunteer regiment, and they found that the work was so hard that they had no time for recreation.
said he was very glad to hear the testimony borne by his hon. friend the member for St. Pancras, as to the nature of the work at Salisbury Plain. He did think that the question raised by the hon. member for Portsmouth an important one, but there was no doubt it would be difficult to accommodate the idea of military training to the notion of a fair amount of holiday which some Militia regiments had always enjoyed and naturally expected to get. Of course he quite realised that the thing must not be pushed too far. The military view was that if the Militia regiments in camp could be brigaded or brought into contact with the Regular forces that would be of the greatest advantage. Of course he must remind his hon. friend and the Committee that if they refused to have ranges at Salisbury Plain, and if they had left more room for manœvring, they would have spoiled the object for which the ranges were put there, because the troops would have had to march so far that it would have been impossible to carry out musketry practice. But the Committee should not suppose that Salisbury Plain was completely covered by ranges. He ventured to say that by marching three or four miles off, every Militia regiment they had could exhaust themselves without encountering the ranges again. He thought the Militia should not camp every year, but that they should at certain periods if possible go through their annual training in their own neighbourhood. That was important when they considered the recruiting figures. It was also important to try to find in the neighbourhood some means of recreation. He did not find that the military authorities were quite as anxious about that as some Members a this House. They naturally put training first of all, as they thought it was difficult to make anything like a soldier in a month. He could only say that he would give his attention to the matter. The right hon. Gentleman spoke of the deficiency of officers in the Militia. The question of officers was of course a very difficult one, and he did not propose at present to enter upon it at any length. All these questions had been sent for the consideration of the Royal Commission. With regard to the officers there were two reasons that made it more difficult at this moment to cope with the absence of officers than formerly. The first was that the Yeomanry drew its officers from the same class, and there had been a great rise in the Yeomanry. The second was that the officers who bad patriotically given up their time to go out to South Africa had in ninny eases suffered very largely in their business, and, when all was over, it was natural that they should release themselves from the ties of the Militia, feeling that they could not give their time with due regard to their own interests. That was the cause of the reduced number of officers One step the War Office had endeavoured to take. Until two years ago any young man who desired to put on a uniform, and could induce the Lord Lieutenant of the county to make him a deputy-lieutenant, was able to obtain that uniform, which was very like that of an Army general, and he could wear it for the rest of his life. They had now put a stop to what lie thought was an unreasonable use of the uniform. In one county, which he would not name, but it was neither one of the largest nor most important, the Lord-Lieutenant had made 126 deputy-lieutenants. He himself felt it his duty to approach His Majesty on that question, and now they had laid down a proportion of deputy-lieutenants to the population which would not give that Lord Lieutenant more than twenty. What was more, the regulations now provided that no lieutenant could be made until he was twenty-eight years of age. He thought His Majesty's regulations on this sub- ject would be appreciated by hon. Members. He would add a few words in regard to Militia recruiting, which the War Office had been carefully watching. It should be remembered that within the last few years 3d. a day had been added to the pay of the Militia, and the bounty of £1 had been increased to £1 10s. Then, three times during the winter months—October, December, and February—another £1 had been added, or £4 10s. in all, as well as, pay. That was a substantial increase of emolument. He could not altogether join with his right hon. friend in the appeal he made that the 1lilitia should be paid at the same rate as the Line. He valued the Militia exceedingly, but he valued the Line much more. The hon. Member for Wiltshire had asked as to the state of the Militia reserve. They would not require the whole of the money taken, but more men were coining forward steadily to join the Militia reserve—at the rate of from 150 to 200 a week. The present reserve only started four or five months ago, and the number was now between 4,000 and 5,000; and before long the total would be appreciable in case of mobilization to fill up the ranks. As regarded Jersey, a satisfactory arrangement had been made as to the Militia there, and they owed to the Lieutenant-Governor of Jersey, Major-General Abadie, C.B., very great thanks for the tact, judgment, and perseverance with which he had persuaded and induced the island authorities to recognise their obligations in the matter. As to the Militia field artillery, the position was this. The military authorities were most highly satisfied with the Militia field artillery formed in 1901, but they had not extended the experiment, because they wanted to see whether the results then obtained, when they had power to mobilize, would be maintained when the men would not be compelled to mobilize. He had not vet got the reports for this year, but if these were as favourable as last year, he was satisfied that they could extend the system, If they could induce the military authorities to take a favourable view of the Militia field artillery they would have gone a long way to secure a full establishment.
*
What about the scientific training of the officers?
Every facility is being given to them to obtain a scientific training.
Vote agreed to.
Motion made, and Question proposed, "That a sum, not exceeding £480,000, be granted to His Majesty, to defray the charge for the pay and allowances of the Imperial Yeomanry, which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March 1904."
*
said he would like to ask the right hon. Gentleman whether he could not take steps to make up the list of deficiencies in the Imperial Yeomanry, which seemed to be in as bad a case as the Militia. He saw from the Return that the officers on the establishment were 1,566, and the number enrolled only 1,016, or a deficiency of 550. As to the noncommissioned officers and troopers, the establishment was 33,256, and the number enrolled only 21,625, or a total deficiency of close on 12,000 men. Then the Returns showed that the deficiency was greater in some regiments than in others. In the country with which he had a connection—Somerset—the West Somerset regiment was short 224 troopers, and the North Somerest 330, or a total shortage for the tow regiments of 554 on establishment of 1,200 men. He did not know whether they were both entitled to have adjutants. It seemed to him that regiments which had only half their number, should not enjoy the same staff privileges as those who were full or nearly full up to their establishment. Again, the two Kent regiments were 500 men short. He should think very little of this if the recruiting was improved, but, according to the Returns, there had been actually no substantial increase. The number of recruits taken during the year was 8,845, as compared with 8,216 in the preceding twelve months. It seemed to him that they were spending a good deal too much on the staffs of these small regiments. He noticed that the East Riding of Yorkshire regiment, with an establishment of 596, had only a strength of fourteen. Why was it kept up as a regiment at all?
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said he wanted some explanation about the Imperial Yeomanry and what they were for. It was a hundred years since the Yeomanry were first raised in this country, and they were then Volunteer cavalry raised under the Act of 1802, subsequently amended by the acts of 1803 and 1804. They remained under these Acts until two years ago, when the right hon. Gentleman introduced and passed a Bill quite at the end of the session, which completely altered the status of the Yeomanry. It put them under the Militia Act and converted them from Volunteer cavalry into mounted Militia. The officers had, in consequence, to get new commissions. When the right hon. Gentleman brought in his Army Corps scheme in the beginning of 1901 a resolution was passed in increase the Yeomanry from 12,000 to 35,000, and they were constituted a mounted infantry force for home defence. The uniform was to be khaki and the arm was to be the rifle and bayonet. He congratulated the right hon. Gentleman on one thing, and that was having dropped the Hindustani word "Khaki" for the good old English word "drab," which was good serviceable colour. But he found that some of the new regiments were by no means satisfied with that uniform. There was the City of London regiment with "blue grey tunics—facings purple;" the 2nd County of London with "scarlet tunics—facings purple;" the 3rd County of London with "green tunics—facings and busby—bag green, plume green and yellow." There was the Surrey regiment, of which his right hon. friend the Secretary of State for War was honorary colonel, which was dressed in drab tunic with scarlet facings. It was a very handsome uniform, because it was a lancer uniform, very becoming, he was quite sure, to his right hon. friend, who would set it of with great advantage. The cap lines of a lancer were simply a hat guard; but this regiment did not wear a lancer cap but a cow-boy hat, although it kept the lancer cap-lines! Then he found that these regiments had got other names. The City of London regiment was called "Roughriders." What was their business in an Army Corps to be? Were they going to break in the horses purchased by the Remount Department from the Omnibus Companies? The 3rd County of London regiment were called "Sharpshooters." Well, he always understood that sharpshooters went in from to prepare the way for the thin red line. But every soldier now was a sharpshooter, and he should like to know what place these County of London sharpshooters were to take in the Army Corps? The 2nd County of London regiment were called the "Westminster Dragoons." According to Johnson's Dictionary a dragoon was "a kind of soldier that serves indifferently on foot or horseback." But if this regiment were to be mounted infantry they would fight on foot; they would only be mounted for the purposes of locomotion. After looking through the descriptions of the uniforms of these regiments, he was reminded of Thackeray's description of the Hammersmith Hussars, which had a uniform of a yellow jacket, pink pantaloons, silver lace, and light-blue pelisse! With regard to the training, the Militia Act did not provide sufficient time for the training of the Yeomanry. Some information should be given on these points, and also with regard to the arming of the Yeomanry. The Committee had been told they were to be armed with rifles and bayonets. None of them had bayonets, but he had been told, though he could hardly credit it, that one regiment was armed with that antiquated and obsolete weapon, the lance, which was now only carried by Regular troops on ceremonial occasions as a relic of their departed glory. He also thought the number of the Yeomanry was largely in excess of the number required. He could not see what they wanted so many mounted troops for. "32,670 available for home defence and 5,226 available for naval fortresses." He would like some little information as to how it was proposed to use mounted men for naval defence. He would also like to know whether the time for the training of the Yeomanry could not be extended and what position they held with the defensive forces of this country. He noticed that in the Second Army Corps they were called the Cavalry Brigade, and in the Fourth they were called the Mounted Brigade. The right hon. Gentleman in his scheme of 1901 said he was going to put his money on the Yeomanry, and he had certainly done so. He should like to take some of the money off, but he did not know whether he would be in order in moving ally other Amendment than that which he had down on the Paper. He thought a great deal of money might be saved on this force, without imperilling the safety of the Empire.
Motion made, and Question proposed, "That a sum, not exceeding £479,900, be granted for the said Service."—( Colonel Legge.)
said he had almost hoped that the prejudice which in old days existed with regard to the Yeomanry might have died out; that those who were in the cavalry in the past might have come into line with those in the cavalry in the present, with regard to the force that had done much distinguished service in South Africa, and which was the nucleus of the greatest mounted force at the present moment. The hon. and gallant Member said the Yeomanry in the first place had too little training, and of course the more training that could be given to them the better the military authorities would be pleased. They had to give them as much training as would adapt them to military requirements, arid having regard to the composition of the force, they gave them as much training as it was possible to give. The training the Yeomanry received was, in his opinion, amply sufficient, and was at the same time the maximum to which the Yeomanry could be expected to go. The hon. and gallant Gentleman sneered at the names of these regiments, but the names were those which the regiments had held for years and years, and when they were put under the Militia Act and formed into a general body of Yeomanry, the Government, in his opinion, would have done wrong to have taken away the names upon which hung so much esprit de corps. The hon. and gallant Gentleman had spoken of "Roughriders" and "Sharpshooters," but he would be the last person in the world to countenance any attempt being made to deprive a regiment of a name upon which hung so much of the esprit de corps. Carbines had been done away with in the cavalry for some time, but would the hon. and gallant Gentleman suggest because they had done away with the carbines that the "Carbineers" ought to lose the name they now possessed?
*
They are an old regiment.
said these regiments would grow old in time, and he hoped the names they had given themselves would last for generations. The Yeomanry scheme was one of the schemes of which, if he might say so, his hon. and gallant friend might be justly proud. The figures of the Yeomanry not long ago were only 8,000 or 9,000. On the 1st of January this year they were 26,000 odd, and in this year alone there had been an increase of 3,600, so that the Committee might take it that the Yeomanry was a great living force. The hon. Member mentioned many regiments which were under strength, and asked whether the staffs of those regiments could not be reduced. No doubt there were some regiments under strength, but he believed that officers commanding in every case were doing their best to raise the standard. Some regiments, of course, had prejudices, and would only take one class of men and the Government preferred that the standard should be raised without in any way changing the status of those who come in. The hon. and gallant Gentleman spoke of others which were over strength, and asked that they should be reduced, but the most important thing in a regiment was its Establishment, arid it ought to be established in the highest possible degree. The Yeomanry was a force which had been developed quite recently, and its growth had been abnormally large, and with that had collie a proportionately greater deficiency of officers. In the matter of all Auxiliary officers it seemed to him a problem almost insoluble how to provide officers. He hoped they would have from the Royal Commission some suggestion as to how officers could be obtained. He was perfectly certain the authorities would be only too glad to get any hints that could be given to them as to obtaining officers and as to checking expense. There was one point on which he agreed with the hon. and gallant Gentleman, he thought it was a great pity that there should not be a design of uniform which was serviceable and cheap. Facings he did not mind, because they could be taken off. In the case of old regiments they must sacrifice something to the past, but in the case of new regiments he did think something of the kind might be done.
*
said that those who sympathised most with the cavalry grievance upon which, the hon. and gallant gentleman, who was no doubt smarting from the removal of the weapon which made the cavalry of the past, had moved the reduction could not follow him in all his strictures upon the Yeomanry, but he thought the Committee generally would need to be assured that the Yeomanry were not being made a sham by making them show sometimes as Yeomanry and sometimes as cavalry. The hon. and gallant Gentleman had more justice in his attack on the names of the new regiments. Some of them had taken most pretentious names. The name of "Roughriders" was very pretentious unless applied to a regiment which really could ride. While upon this point he thought the hon. and gallant Member had something to go upon, he did not agree with his general strictures on the Yeomanry, but he thought the Committee should be anxious to see that they were not being put off with that force, which could not displace Regular cavalry or mounted infantry. There was some truth in the allegation that these troops were being used to some extent in the War Office Returns, both as cavalry and mounted infantry, and the statements of the War Office, and even Lord Roberts himself, had to be very carefully examined for fear that the country might be led to believe that it possessed a great mass of Regular cavalry, which it had not got. The Committee should insist upon seeing what was in the mind of the War Office with regard to the future strength of the cavalry; because, although the Yeomanry might be all they desired to see it, it could not take the place of Regular cavalry or mounted infantry.
thought this was one part of the policy of the right hon. Gentleman, the Secretary of State for War, which offered most ground for congratulation, and that it had been a most signal success. Anyone who regarded the Yeomanry as fitted to play its part in the defence of this country in case of invasion, could not but congratulate themselves upon the increase of numbers, due entirely to the action of his right hon. friend. He thought it was unreasonable to complain of the Yeomanry in the tone of the hon. Member. There had been great improvements in the training and the general position of the Yeomanry since the prewar days. It was a great gain to have got them under conditions more nearly those under which they would have to serve. Through the policy of his right hon. friend there had been a distinctly better feeling towards the Yeomanry in the War Office, which was now prepared to make arrangements for the training of the Yeomanry and to allow the Artillery to come out and train with them, which was of great assistance to the proper training of the Yeomanry. He rose particularly to make two suggestions with regard to the subject of the training of the Yeomanry. In the first place, in his opinion it was unduly long, and he would point out that, just at the moment when they had changed the drill and had commenced to give them a far more simple drill than that of the Cavalry, which was difficult to learn, in proportion as they had simplified the training they had increased its length. If the Yeomanry had shorter training, a great many more men would join, because many found it difficult to leave their occupations for 18 days, who would gladly join if the training could be brought within a fortnight. The other suggestion he desired to make was with regard to the Yeomanry reserve. He thought for cavalry men to join the Yeomanry reserve would create invidious distinctions. What he desired to see was a real reserve for the Yeomanry. He believed it would be quite possible, by enlisting men with the basis of three years with the regiment and six with the reserve, to get as many men as at present, and to avoid losing altogether yeomen on the expiry of their term with the regiment. Many men had to leave from family or business considerations, but it did not follow that they had lost sympathy with the force, and it would be a valuable scheme if they could pass to a Yeomanry reserve. For a very small retaining fee men would go through a course of shooting, and parade one day a year; £2 a head would probably cover the cost, and. by that means a real reserve for the Yeomanry might be built up. He hoped the right hon. Gentleman would give the matter his consideration.
said that his experience had been the exact opposite to that of his hon. friend. The difficulty in his regiment arose from men coming in the middle of the training and saying their employers could not let them remain the whole time. In one respect a town regiment had an advantage over a country regiment: it was able easily to get its men together for squadron drills, whereas a country regiment, scattered over a wide area, had great difficulty in so doing. In his opinion, the present period of training, considering the pay, was not too long, arid certainly it was none too long to acquire the knowledge a. yeoman was now expected to possess. The drill itself was much easier to acquire than it used to be, and he could assure the right hon. Baronet that the cavalry drill, as a whole, was not expected from the Yeomanry. As to the expenses of officers, in his opinion the sum granted to Yeomanry regiments was, as a general rule, quite sufficient. It was perfectly possible to run a Yeomanry regiment on the sum now given. There were certain items, however, in respect of which officers could be helped. Nobody would suggest that it would not be an excellent thing for every Yeomanry regiment to acquire a camp, but it certainly involved expense to the officers. No provision whatever was made for sergeants' mess, and there was no tent issued which could be used for a mess-room. These tents had always to be hired, and formed a considerable item of expense. With regard to the position of the permanent staff regimental sergeant-major, so far as he could make out, the Yeomanry regulations made no provision in that direction. Five permanent staff sergeants were allowed for each regiment, one of whom became regimental sergeant-major, and, with the adjutant, did practically the whole of the work, both on training and during the year. At present, not only was the permanent staff sergeant-major who acted in this capacity in a worse position as regarded rank than his Militia brother, in that he was not a warrant officer, but he was in a worse position than the sergeant-major similarly placed in a Volunteer regiment. The sergeant-major of a Volunteer regiment after twenty-one years service reckoned his pension under Class I., whereas a Yeomanry regimental sergeant-major reckoned his pension on precisely the same basis as a squadron sergeant-major, under Class II., and that alone meant a difference of 3d. a day in his pension. He asked whether the right hon. Gentleman could see his way to recommend the War Office to put the Yeomanry regimental sergeant-major on the same footing as his Militia brother, or, failing that, to put him on the same pension basis as the regimental sergeant-major in a Volunteer regiment.
asked, in reference to the Irish Yeomanry, whether the noble Lord could give the Committee any information as to the number of regiments and the number of men to be raised in Ireland. On the general question, it seemed that the cost of the Yeomanry worked out at £21 per head. That was about one-fifth the cost of a Regular cavalry man, but if the men could not shoot they were not worth the money. He understood that they devoted their time on training to riding and manœuvring, and did not practise shooting.
said there were two Irish regiments of Yeomanry, and they were given precisely the same establishment as the English regiments. He did not recollect the exact figure, but he believed it was 550.
said that although he felt inclined to stray into the path which the right hon. Baronet the Member for the Forest of Dean had rather tempted them to discuss—the relative numbers of cavalry, mounted infantry, and Yeomanry in this country—he feared that if he attempted to do so he should find himself out of order after the first two of three sentences. He recognised the importance of the country being well supplied with mounted infantry, but whether or not the establishment of Yeomanry was the right way to accomplish this he could not discuss at the present moment. His hon. and gallant friend asked what Yeomanry were, and what they were going to do. At the present time it seemed to him that the right hon. Gentleman hoped the Yeomanry would be available, not only for home defence, but that they would supply a certain number of additional troops to supplement the mounted infantry in case of war. The two objects were not always incompatible, but, at the same time, they were very different objects. If they wanted the Yeomanry for home defence they must try to enlist a rather different class of men than those which were required to supplement to mounted infantry abroad on foreign service. If they wanted men to volunteer in case of war, it mattered very little from what class they drew them, or whether they had any position or stake in the country, or any knowledge of the particular locality. The less stake they had in the country the more likely were they to volunteer for the extra pay. If they wanted Yeomanry for home defence they ought to do all they could to retain the British farmer in the ranks. There was no finer cavalry material in the world than the English farmer, who provided his own horse, for they were accustomed to a certain amount of discipline in the hunting field, and the British farmer, officered by his neighbour, whom he often followed all over the country hunting, was the ideal cavalry solider. This was the class of men who formed the nucleus of the first batch of Yeomanry sent out to South Africa during the late war. With regard to the training period, he thought it was very difficult for a large farmer to go away for so long a time. The small farmer found some difficulty also, but the extra pay which the War Office now gave the Yeomanry compensated him for the length of the training. In the case of the large farmer it was very difficult for him to spare practically three weeks away from his business. On the other hand, it was ridiculous to suppose, if they took the Yeomanry as reserve in order to get volunteers to go abroad, that they could train them in the space of three weeks. They could not make a horseman in three weeks. They might give a man sufficient confidence to induce him to volunteer in that time, but it was impossible to unite those two classes and still retain them usefully in the ranks. When the Secretary of State for War brought his Yeomanry scheme forward there were a great many Yeomanry officers in the House, and they protested against the increased length of the training, but the right hon. Gentleman assured them that the fullest permission would be given to commanding officers to grant leave to their men. He believed that the whole solution of this problem lay in trusting the commanding officers, and giving them fuller powers to choose the best men they could get to command Yeomanry regiments, who must be of local standing, and who should also possess military knowledge, and be efficient. When they had chosen the commanding officers they should give them a free hand and trust them to produce the best regiments that local circumstances would permit. The War Office would ' probably say that that had been their intention all through, but if they intended it to be carried out, and the commanding officers were allowed a free hand, this fact should be impressed upon the generals commanding the Army Corps. It was almost impossible for the officers commanding the Yeomanry to go against the wishes of the generals commanding the Army Corps, and they should be informed that they were to allow the commanding officers to have a free hand. With regard to the training, there seemed no reason why the first four days should not be given up, where necessary, to recruit drill or to the riding-school drill, but it would be ridiculous to ask men to do this who had been accustomed to riding and might be even more efficient in this respect than the officers. He hoped his right hon. friend would take these matters into his serious consideration, because it was a lamentable thing for commanding officers to lose some of their best noncommissioned officers of good position, who attracted recruits of good standing, and even old Bisley veterans, whose services were lost because they could not devote the time to the training, owing to calls upon them at home. He ventured to bring these points before the notice of the right hon. Gentleman, knowing how anxious he was for the welfare of the Yeomanry, and what a good friend he had shown himself to be to them during the last few years.
said the hon. Member who introduced this Motion for a reduction seemed to think that fourteen days was the only training the Yeomanry got. Be wished to point out that they had a great number of drills be ides those they got when they went to camp, although that was a very important portion of their training. His hon. friend the Member for Plymouth had suggested separate training for regiments, accordingly as they came from the town or the country. A great many regiments contained men both from the town and the country. The regiment he belonged to was recruited partly in the country and partly in the town. There was a very great difference between the men from the town and from the country, because even in a small country town, as a rule, they knew as little about riding as they did in London. The hon. Member opposite had called attention to the small numbers in these regiments, but he should remember that they had only very recently been started, and he did not think it was a good thing to fill up a regiment at once. By taking time they were able to show that some standard was required to join the regiment. Some commanding officers were very stringent in regard to the conditions they imposed; and that should not be interfered with. As to the length of training, he should like it made longer if possible. He was aware that there was a difficulty in giving training in places not outside their own county, although that would be an enormous advantage in many cases. In his own county there was really no place where they could drill 400 or 500 men. His regiment contained a good many townsmen, and if they were obliged to take their fortnight's training outside the county they would probably leave the regiment. He was glad to hear the noble Lord speak about the growing expense of officers, because that was a matter of great importance in many new regiments. There appeared to be a great determination that these new regiments should be run upon a very economical basis, and upon that matter he rather agreed with the criticisms made by the mover of this reduction. The full dress for officers was, of course, purely voluntary, but it soon became practically compulsory, and very difficult for officers to avoid. Then there was the question of the full, smart, dress for the men. In this respect very often there was dissatisfaction caused because a neighbouring county had a very smart dress for the men, while another county had not. He thought the Secretary of State for War should give some attention to that matter, and that he should be even stricter with commanding officers than he had been, with reference to the growing expense of Yeomanry officers. He had taken some trouble to recruit officers himself, and he was always asked what would be the expense. That was a difficult thing to give a definite answer upon, because the expense was rather uncertain. The only thing that was not uncertain was that the expense was generally great. Another matter which he should like to complain about was that the training was very short, and that the amount of work done during the training was diminished by several causes. In the fifteen days there were probably two Sundays, and then there was too much inspection. He should have thought that one day was sufficient for inspection, but it was supposed to he necessary that the inspecting officers should have two days for inspection—one day in field exercise, a sham fight, or something of that kind, and then the next day going through drill with each squadron commander or troop leader. That was a large amount to take out of this small amount of time available for training. It was certainly his experience, and he believed it was the experience of other officers, that the General of the district came down and said that he must have an inspection. Then the whole of another day was lost for the regular training, for something had to be shown to him which was not a part of the regular training. Then the General of the Army Corps came down, and he had to be treated the same way, a special day being set apart for him. He should like to suggest to the Secretary of State for War that possibly this inspection was a little excessive, and. that it would be better if they were left a little more to do their own work iii their own way. He should like to ask what were the regulations which permitted, in the same way as in the Militia, officers to join the Yeomanry and then pass through the Yeomanry into the Regular cavalry. He did not know whether the right hon. Gentleman was going to move any further in the way of creating a separate force inside the. Yeomanry for foreign service. He could not help thinking that it would be an invidious thing to establish this class of men in the same regiment. If the necessity arose they could count on getting a considerable number from the Yeomanry for service abroad. Perhaps he might be allowed to congratulate the right hon. Gentleman on the great success of the new Yeomanry movement.
said he could assure his hon. friend the Member for South Manchester that he sympathised with his remarks with regard to the number of inspections, but he thought that what he had said showed that the position the Yeomanry held in the country was such that, all those who were placed over them, desired to see as much of them as they could. With regard to the expenses of officers, he was informed that the expenses of the officers during training in some regiments, which he would not name, had amounted to £72 each. He did not wish to use strong language and say that that was a scandal, but it was certainly very undesirable. Whatever the War Office could do to prevent that sort of thing would certainly be done. With regard to the suggestion that regimental sergeant-majors should be made warrant officers, he understood that there were conditions, at all events, in the stronger regiments which might justify something being done in that respect, and he would undertake to consider the question during the autumn. Two serious questions had been asked—first, was this large number of Yeomanry needed, and, secondly, what was going to happen with regard to the Yeomanry reserve? With regard to the first, he maintained that of all the forces that had recently been raised, this body of Yeomanry was the most useful—for this reason, that it supplied the one thing we had never had, namely, a sufficient number of mounted troops which, if we were to make preparations for invasion, must exist to cover any army which might be put in the field. A cavalry regiment of 700 men cost £65,000, and for that sum 3,000 to 3,500 Yeomanry could be had; and, as had been shown in the late war, for our purposes it was important to have numbers of men on whom we could draw in an emergency. As to the proposal to put 5,000 Yeomanry at the service of the military authorities for service abroad in case of emergency, trained cavalry of the very first order was wanted now as much as ever; but a certain body of mounted troops, not so highly trained as cavalry, was also required who could assist the forces of the country and take a certain position in an emergency. It was that function which the Yeomanry were being trained to carry out. Some dislike had been expressed of the existence of two classes of Yeomanry. His answer was that there were two classes of Militia up to last year, and it had never occurred to anybody to say that a man who did not join the Militia reserve was a different being from the man who did. It was a question of pay. He did not regard the subject as dead, and he proposed to consult the Yeomanry Advisory Board arid the commanding officers on the subject, and if he secured the support of the latter, he hoped the Yeomanry Members of the House; would not make it too difficult to carry out what the military authorities, on the one side, and the commanding officers, on the other, desired.
said he could not allow this Vote to pass without a protest against the very serious position in which the Yeomanry had been placed by the action of the right hon. Gentleman the Secretary of State for War in placing a proportion of that force under totally different conditions from the rest Up to the present time the Yeomanry had been Volunteers, and he was astonished that so many Members in the House who had been, or were members of that force, had not protested against this revolutionary change in the constitution of the Yeomanry, who had been essentially recruited from amongst the farmers of the country to remain at home for its defence. Although the right hon. Gentleman proposed to give the Yeomanry a little more money, the new system by which their Volunteer element was to be done away with was bound to be a failure. During the late war was there not plenty of demonstration that the Yeomanry would turn out for foreign service if need be, and what then was the use of altering the whole character of the force? He regretted very much the alteration in the clothing of the Yeomanry. When he first joined the service during the Franco-German War, he had a very keen recollection that within a few months their heckles were taken from them and they were given helmets; and if the Zulus had beaten in the last war the War Office would have given them feathers and paint! The War Office were altering the Yeomanry, Artillery, and every other uniform in order to suit the needs of South Africa; and anything more absurd and ridiculous he never heard of. He had seen a Yeomanry cap the other day which was a cross between a French shako and a dustman's hat. These extraordinary alterations of uniform would not, in his opinion, bring recruits to the Yeomanry force. If a cavalryman and a Yeomanryman was not well dressed and thought himself invincible in love and war, he was not worth 1s. 6d. a day.
*
said he should like to assure the Committee that he duly appreciated the services of the Yeomanry, of which he was deeply sensible. He had not any intention of sneering at the new Yeomanry, and the illustrations which he had given were taken from official documents. He begged leave to withdraw his Amendment.
Amendment, by leave, withdrawn.
Original Question put, and agreed to.
£1,280,000, Volunteer Corps, Pay and Allowances.
*
said he wished to know whether the War Office would be prepared to consider the possibility, or rather the advisability, of equalising the position of sergeant-majors in Volunteer regiments to that of sergeant-majors in the Militia. The sergeant-majors in the Volunteers did an infinity of work. They acted as paymaster sergeant, quarter-master sergeant and orderly clerk, they drilled their recruits, they attended to the range orders, and also did the work of the armourer-sergeant. He thought he was not asking too much in demanding that these noncommissioned officers should be treated in the same way as the sergeant-majors in the Militia. There was another point which interested hint considerably. On page 49 of the Army Estimates there was an item "Officers Outfit Allowance, £18,000." Last year the amount was £15,500. He would be obliged if some official at the War Office would inform him who were the officers who got this allowance.
said that some years ago, in order to assist officers, £20 was given to each officer for his outfit.
*
said it was one of the increasing misfortunes of age that he should have been debarred from enjoying that £20. He was not in command of a Volunteer regiment, but he knew there was a very strong feeling that Occasionally, if possible, their training in camp should take place in their own neighbourhood. That would be an advantage, he considered, for recruiting, financial, and other purposes. If the right hon. Gentleman would consider this point, most country Volunteer officers would be deeply grateful to him.
*
said he wished to direct attention to the question of the rearmament of the Artillery Volunteers. He had addressed a great many Questions on the subject to the Secretary of State for War and had been informed that the matter would be settled. Another hon. Member had been told that a number of mobile artillery would be armed with 15 pounders. That promise, however, had not been fulfilled. He considered that the War Secretary had perpetrated two enormities. He had inflicted great hardship on the Volunteer Artillery and still greater hardship on the British Museum and other institutions which contained antiquities of ancient date. The discon- tent felt by Volunteers was not altogether without foundation. There was nothing that so deteriorated a body of men as the knowledge that the work they were doing was utterly useless. The mobile artillery force had made great sacrifices. There were only five brigade divisions in the United Kingdom; and one of them he was connected with. It was all very well to say that the Volunteer Artillery were of no use. If that argument could be sustained why did they exist at all? He recollected a debate in the House of Lords when there was an acrimonious interchange between the late Commander-in-Chief and Lord Lansdowne as to the conduct of the War, and when Lord Wolseley said that Lord Lansdowne had advised him to send the Volunteer Artillery to the front with obsolete guns. The mobile artillery were now to be armed with 4·7 guns. That would destroy the very being and character of the force. To begin with, he had heard from various officers connected with the Sheffield and Lanark forces, that the men were not of sufficient physique to be able to move these big guns. That did not apply to the 3rd Kent or Lincoln, or to the 1st Monmouth. In 1891, the Inspector General of Auxiliary Forces, inspecting the 4th West York, said he was well satisfied with what he had seen, and that, though the corps had not quite the same degree of mobility as Royal Field Artillery, which could not be expected after only three days' mounted work, it was so, far as mobility and general efficiency were concerned, well worthy of field guns. Sir A. E. Turner further said that he had seen only two other Volunteer Artillery Corps so good. One was the 3rd Kent (Woolwich Arsenal), the other the 1st Monmouth, which in 1900 had done three months' training at Aldershot and on Salisbury Plain. Continuing, he said he might safely say that these three corps would be attached as Field Artillery to the new Army Corps, and would be the first to receive the promised issue of new pattern guns. But at the present moment these brigade divisions were armed only with obsolete 16 pounders. An additional grievance was inflicted on them by putting them through infantry foot drill, instead of cavalry foot drill. In fact, the Artillery Volunteer was at present of a nondescript and hybrid character, a mixture of modernity and antiquity—a sort of cross between a fox-terrier and a dodo. It was also said there was no chance of the Woolwich Volunteers being called into requisition, for the reason, that if war broke out, they would be required to work in the Arsenal. There was no substantial reason for that. They were not skilled workmen, but labourers employed around the Arsenal. It would be far better if the War Secretary were to look after material he had at hand than seek aerial schemes for military organisations in the future. Because the Artillery Volunteers were not properly armed, and because of the neglect with which his right hon. friend had treated them, the hon. member for Woolwich now sat on the Opposition Benches. He hoped, however, that his right hon. friend would pay more attention to the matter in future.
*
said he wished to call the attention of the Secretary of State for War, to two points, connected with the Volunteers, which were of immediate urgency. They were the inadequate supply of ammunition to the Volunteers, and also the inadequacy of the camp allowance. He agreed that the Volunteer Artillery ought not to be supplied with obsolete weapons. He had been told by a commanding officer that he had seen in a museum, at Hanover, guns marked obsolete, which were of the same pattern as those used by his own regiment in this country. Volunteers had to thank the War Office for very small mercies; and therefore, he was not surprised that they should have been thankful to the War Office for having granted them a little suspense until the Royal Commission had inquired into the whole subject. He was glad their case was being considered and that they would have a chance of proving that they were an efficient branch of the Volunteer service. Although he had criticized the policy of the War Office in connection with the Volunteers, he did not associate himself with the wholesale injudicious criticisms that had been passed upon the Secretary of State for War, because he believed he had done splendid service to the country at a time of storm and stress. He questioned whether any of his critics could have shown such ability under the circumstances. The right hon. Gentleman had done more for the Regular Army, Militia, and Yeomanry, than any War Secretary of their time. He had very much increased the allowance to these branches of the service. He believed his Yeomanry scheme as a whole was assured of success, and that success would follow his scheme in connection with the Regular Army and Militia, because he had based his scheme on large augmentations of general facilities and allowances. But he did not think the same success was attending his administration of the Volunteer force, probably because he had not had time to go into the matter thoroughly. In one year, 1901–1902, the Volunteers had fallen off from 277, 000 to 251,000, a decrease of 26,000 from 1901–2 till 1902–3, or 10 per cent., whereas the shortage of officers was still more marked. In 1897 the shortage was 1,188, while on 1 January, 1903, it was as much as 1,895, which was an increase of 40 per cent. He was an advocate of the sound policy of increasing the number and efficiency of the Volunteers in proportion to the increasing necessities of the Empire. He thought that, to secure this, the Capitation Grant should be increased to a minimum of 60s., rising to 60s. for various degrees of efficiency; there should be a more liberal allowance for rifle ranges and an additional allowance for going into camp. A Royal Commission had been appointed to consider the whole subject, but there were two questions of immediate importance which the War Office was quite capable of dealing with without waiting for the report of the Commission. There had been a considerable shrinkage in the Volunteers, both in the rank and file and in the officers, and if the Government would take up the two questions he had indicated he thought they would do much to preserve the Volunteers in the condition in which they found them. With regard to the question of ammunition, Lord Roberts had pointed out that shooting was now the most important part of military training, and should be encouraged as much as possible. The War Office had encouraged it in the Army, Militia and Yeomanry, but the Volunteers had not received a round more ammunition to enable them to arrive at high efficiency. In the opinion of all officers concerned the present allowance of ninety rounds was miserably inadequate, and in his opinion it should be increased to 150, which was the least allowance that could be made to insure efficiency. The minimum allowance for going into camp should be at least 5s. He believed the success of the Yeomanry was due to the allowance they received for going into camp, which enabled them to go back from camp with from £5 to £7 in their pockets. If it was desired to make the Volunteers a success the men should have £1 or 30s. a week so long as they were in camp. They had proved their efficiency in South Africa, and it was a great disappointment to them that while the Yeomanry had increased by 150 per cent., the Militia by 50 per cent., and the Army to a considerable extent, by the judicious increase of pay, allowances, and facilities, the Volunteers were steadily decreasing, owing to more arduous training being required of them without the corresponding increase of facilities and allowances which should have accompanied the demand.
in reply, said it was not desirable to discuss this Vote at any great length to-night, because, as would be seen iron the speech of the hon. Member who had just sat down, the debate dealt almost exclusively with points which were now before the Royal Commission, and it would not be respectful to the Commission if he were to forestall their decisions on all the points raised by the hon. Member. On the other hand, if he were to make suggestions it would he like giving a lead to the Commission as to what they should propose. He hoped the Report would be out well before Christmas. His hon. friend must not suppose, however, that the Volunteers were suffering in the meantime. The numbers increased enormously during 1900 and 1901. On 1 January last they were 250,000, and by the latest Return in July the numbers were 256,000, while 176,000 went into camp last year. The question of money was a most serious subject. Nothing was easier than to raise demands which every Member of the Committee would be glad to meet if he could, but the concession of 5s. asked by his hon. friend would mean an expenditure of £112,000.
*
said it would have been well worth the expense.
said there were many things well worth the expense winch they could not do. They had provided the Volunteers with 154 4·7 inch guns of the most modern type. On no previous occasion had so much been given, and it represented the extreme which the military authorities required in the country. They had Volunteer batteries of artillery in excess of what was required by the military authorities for national defence, but it was a subject on which the Royal Commission would doubtless give some advice Such armament caused the Volunteer Artillery to be as costly as the Regular Artillery. The question of sergeant-majors would have to be left until the Royal Commission had reported. Many people seemed to think there was a want of sympathy on the part of the Executive with the Volunteers. He assured the Committee that such an idea was absolutely unfounded. When Lord Roberts came home from South Africa the Volunteers were for the first time recognised as tit to serve the country in the first line of defence, and they were assigned that postion in the fourth, fifth, and sixth Army Corps; but at the same time something more in the way of efficiency was asked of them. That request hail been taken as evidence of want of sympathy. The War Office had fully recognised that unexpected demands frequently caused embarrassments, and they had not, up to the present, enforced any demand which had caused any serious reduction in numbers, but they had asked the Commission to consider the matter. When he first went to the War Office, the capitation and other payments for Volunteers amounted to £451,000 for a force of 218,000 men; today, with a force of 256,000 men, the capitation and other allowances were £1,068,000. That did not show any want of sympathy on the part of the the Executive; it showed rather that they had been very considerate, and they would continue to be so He hoped the Committee would now allow the Vote to be taken.
*
asked what meaning was now attached to the phrase "field artillery" in this Vote. Two or three years ago the intention was to form batteries of field artillery in the ordinary sense of the term, but he understood that that intention had now been given up.
was understood to say that the proposal was to arm the Volunteers with heavier guns than the ordinary field artillery. He did not think the military authorities were willing to consider them as in the first line; they looked upon them rather as supplemental to than as taking the place of Regular artillery.
asked whether it was possible for the 2nd Battalion of the Suffolk Volunteers to obtain the camping allowance which, under certain circumstances, they would have received last year. The battalion comprised a large number of agriculturists, and they were told to go into camp in harvest-time. That was a most unfortunate order, and it would have been absolutely impossible for the battalion to comply with it in anything like full numbers. The commanding officer represented the case to the authorities, and pointed out that only 130 men out of 600 could go to camp, and they would prefer being brigaded earlier in the year. They were allowed to do that, and went to camp 400 or 500 strong. They made themselves very efficient, and they naturally expected to receive camping allowance. In that expectation, however, they were disappointed, because they were not brigaded at the time stated by the War Office, and they were mulcted to the extent of £430. That was an extraordinary penalty for a poor battalion to have to bear, and it might result in the disbandment of the battalion.
replied that it was a question between a higher and a lower allowance. Unfortunately the battalion did not get into the condition necessary to entitle them to the higher allowance. It was an exceptional case, and he had put it before the Treasury, but the Treasury, who were within the exercise of their right, felt that the higher allowance should only be given if certain conditions were fulfilled. Those conditions were not fulfilled, and therefore they did not get the allowance.
Vote agreed to.
Resolutions to be reported.
Motion made, and Question proposed. "That a sum, not exceeding £530,000 be granted to His Majesty, to defray the charge for the pay, etc., of the medical establishment, and for medicines, etc., which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March 1904."
hoped the Committee would not think it unreasonable that he should wish to make some comments on this Vote. There had been a reform of the Army Medical Service, the earliest and, perhaps, the most elaborate reform, as far as it went, of any which the right hon. Gentleman had produced. But this House, or this Committee, had had practically no opportunity of considering it, and he personally had not troubled the House on the subject for more than two years. He hoped that was an example of patience which would commend itself to the Committee. He would remind the Committee that the scheme of reform was first brought forward in October, 1901, in the shape of the Report of the Committee appointed by the right hon. Gentleman to consider the re-organisation of the Army Medical Service. In February, 1902, this scheme was remodelled and expanded by Royal Warrant. No opportunity was afforded of discussing it till the following July, when the Vote was specifically put down for the afternoon, and specifically not put down for the evening sitting. It was not taken in the afternoon, but it was taken in the evening when several of those interested had been informed on reliable authority that it could not come on and were not present. Another year had now passed and the Committee were therefore in this position, that they had had a scheme of reform of a very important part of the Army, brought forward, formulated, confirmed, and put into practice, without Parliament having had any adequate opportunity of discussing it. He thought he could show that it was not by any means a merely professional matter, but one that ought to understood and discussed by hon. Members, and could be discussed without professional jargon and made perfectly clear to the lay mind—the class of mind which he always thought, if it saw professional or departmental matters clearly, was the best judge of it. When the matter was one concerning the economical administration of one of the great Departments, it was still more incumbent on hon. Members to look closely into it. He was far from wishing to depreciate the work, still less the intentions, of the right hon. Gentleman, the Secretary of State for War, whose honesty of purpose, great industry, and many other admirable qualities, he respected and admired. He was all the more ready to pay him every tribute, because he was the first to alter—he perhaps might be pardoned for saving, to clear and elevate—the ministerial atmosphere that surrounded this question, and to make some acknowledgment to those who had brought it forward. But while attaching full importance to what had been done, he proposed to show, and he felt it his bounden duty to show, that if they left the matter as it now stood, and went forward in the belief that the Army Medical Service had been made efficient, or cast into a shape that would make it efficient, to meet the demands of a great war, they would simply court a repetition of those disasters which had followed every so-called attempt at reform during the last sixty years.
And it being half-past Seven of the clock, the Chairman left the Chair to make his Report to the House.
Resolutions to be reported To-morrow; Committee also report Progress; to sit again this evening.
Evening Sitting
SUPPLY [21ST ALLOTTED DAY.]
Considered in Committee.
(In the Committee.)
[Mr. JEFFREYS (Hampshire, N.) in the Chair.]
Army Estimates, 1903–4
£530,000, Medical Establishment, Pay, etc.
said when the sitting was suspended he was stating that the scheme of reforms of the right hon. Gentleman did not provide against disaster in the time of a great war. Before explaining that he wished to remind the Committee of what had been reformed, and to lay it up to the credit of the right hon. Gentleman. First, there had been a wise and healthy association of the civilian with the military medical element, not only for the purposes of reform, but in the normal administration of the Army Medical Service. Four civilian medical men had been placed permanently on the Advisory Board. In stating these reforms he did not propose, for want of time, to criticise the manner in which they had been carried out. If he did he should have something to say about the unreasonableness of expecting to get eminent civilians to share in the multifarious duties of that Board for the payment of £200 a year. Of course they knew that two very distinguished surgeons, Sir Frederick Treves and Sir Alfred Fripp, were now performing that service. But when the enthusiasm of war was over, if they wanted to make the civilian element a permanent factor in the normal administration of the Army Medical Service and to get the best men for the purpose, they could not do so for £200 a year. It was trading on their patriotism. They had better pay them nothing and let them have the honour and unmixed gratitude for rendering a public service, which certainly belong to the gentlemen which certainly belong to the gentlemen he had named. But what he feared most was that this civilian element would be gradually eliminated so far as its practical functions went, and that the administration would fall back into that old routine of departmentalism under which it slept for so many years, waking only at the sound of war to produce on of its perennial medical disasters. The second great reform had been and increase of pay to the Army medical officer which naturally improved his position. The third had been an increase of numbers, about the advisability of which there was some doubt—save in one respect; that so far as an increase of number was necessary in order to give the Army medical officer study-leave and opportunities for self-improvement, and therefore to raise his efficiency—so far it was legitimate. It was not legitimate, as it was intended to make the Army Medical Service independent of civilian aid. The fourth reform was the granting of this study—leave and facilities for self-improvement, which the Army medical officer was always seeking for, and which he rarely could obtain, and then had to pay for himself. It always seemed to him a great reproach to all concerned that after his entrance examination the Army medical officer had no opportunities of study afforded him in a profession in which continuous and well-directed study was quite as necessary as practice. Under this head he would like to ask the right hon. Gentleman what had become of the proposed London Military Hospital and Military School? The fifth reform, arid one of the most important, had been the introduction of promotion by merit rather than mere seniority, this promotion by merit being secured by a mingled system of examination and selection. The sixth reform was applied to what was shown to be in the last war a crying evil—the condition of the orderlies. Their status and pay had been improved. The absurdity of strong men, who ought to be at the front, struggling over clerks' work at the base; of thinking that every man, because he was an orderly, could be an efficient nurse, which. required three years' training,—or could be a good cook; the absurdity of not differentiating from these skilled departments the orderlies who were only suited for general labour; all this, they learned from a speech made by the Director-General last October, had been recognised and the orderlies had been classified according to their various functions. The seventh reform—he did not know what progress had been made in it, but it was promised in the speech of the Director-General to which he had referred—was the founding of a sanitary department. The last and greatest reform of all had been a full recognition of the principle of female nursing in military hospitals, and the organisation of an efficient female nursing service under the intelligent and experienced supervision of Her Majesty the Queen. He had given a full list of the reforms that had been carried out, or were included in the scheme, or were promised by those responsible for the Depart- ment; and he was naturally the first to admit they were wise and prudent reforms, because they were all pointed out, and argued one by one, with instances of what was going on under his own eyes in South Africa, in the series of articles he wrote to the Times. Those articles were entirely devoted to the question of reform of the Army Medical Service, to the crying need for it, and for a more reasonable and generous treatment of Army medical officer, until the time came when the state of things out there required a drastic and immediate change, and the state of things here—the dream of satisfaction into which the public hand been lulled—made it unavoidable in the interests of humanity to bring public opinion to bear on the subject. He had no fault to find with the right hon. Gentleman for what he had done. But it was what he had not done that would involve us at any moment in great danger if we were plunged into another war. It was so true that it almost sounded like a platitude now, to say that we could never maintain an Army medical service in time of peace equal to the demands of great war. It was an axiom that applied generally to the question of Army reform, but specifically and most of all to the Army Medical Service. It was all very well to prefect our normal system for peace time; but one of the objects, perhaps the most important object in doing so, was to be able to elasticise and expand it at any moment for a great war. The two things ought to be inseparable if we were to have economy and efficiency and be ready for war. In this respect the Army Medical Service was in a peculiar position, and differed from other departments of the Army. They could not always get artillery or trained cavalry or scouts of other skilled factors in the field force from outside; but they had always ready at hand an unlimited supply of civilian medical men who were willing and anxious to go out to a war. It was always so. It was so when the South African War broke out, and afterwards when the pressure was at its greatest. Why then was this civilian complement not properly utilised? What caused the breakdown? It was because there was no organization of this civilian medical aid. He should have thought this was the first and most important lesson taught by the recent war. But such an organisation was entirely absent from this great scheme of reform. Anyone looking at the reforms would gather that the medical failure in the last war was due to the want of scientific attainment on the part of the Army doctor. Was that so? Not in the least; or only in the smallest possible measure. If they had been the most skilful physicians and surgeons in the world, or even up to the standard that this scheme contemplated, and had been paid four times what it laid down, did they suppose that would have averted the catastrophe? No. They wanted more materiel, more men, more orderlies and nurses and doctors. They would want them in the future; and they wanted them selected, not by hasty advertisement at a day's notice, but by some carefully prepared scheme of registration, or other means of securing an enlargement of their medical service, which would not only be suitable and efficient but on which they could rely at any time when the need might arise. Had anything of this sort been done? It had been a great deal talked about but had it been done? He put aside the important matters of a Militia Medical reserve, and a Volunter Medical reserve, because he did not know what had been done in those directions. The worst of it was we rover did know what had been done, and we never cared to inquire in a quasi-professional matter like this. We took things for granted, and went to sleep until one fine day we woke up and found the deluge upon us. Then we made a terrible row, and hanged someone. And then we went to sleep again. There was only one way out of this fatal cycle of disaster and attempted reform; only one way to shake off the national reproach that had run through the history of the Army Medical Service only one way to secure efficiency and economy with regard to it, and that was by a carefully thought-out scheme of civilian aid to be ready when called on by a great war. It was a monstrous thesis to put forward that a civilian doctor or surgeon could not treat a soldier. Yet it was this suggestion, born of Army medical rank, which placed the sword before the stethoscope, and fostered by departmentalism, which lay at the root of all our failures, and it was this idea which permeated the right hon. Gentleman's scheme of reform. It was perfectly obvious. Speaking at White-haven last October, the right hon. Gentleman had cited, as a proof of the success of his reform, that "whereas up to the time of the late war they were getting one candidate for two vacancies, they were now getting between two and three candidates for one vacancy." That was his great object, to enrol men in the Royal Army Medical Corps—men who had to be paid and had to be pensioned at the expense of the nation. What had that to do, what could it ever have to do, with being prepared for a great war That could only be done by civilian aid. The methods by which civilian aid could be utilised in time of war were twofold. In the first place, there was the simple method of enlarging the numerical strength of their staff by taking into it, for the time required and no longer, civilian aid. They wanted a scheme prepared for obtaining this aid, for utilising it, for distributing it in its requisite proportions, for settling the relations of the civilian medical man to the Army medical officer, and for avoiding many other difficulties that arose in South Africa. The absence of any such scheme gave rise to untold evil. Some of it was told. At No. 8 General Hospital at Bloemfontein, where there were nearly 2,000 patients, the strained relations between the two classes of medical men disorganised the whole work. When the principal medical officer of South Africa was questioned about it, he stated that "he knew of the friction"; and he added the strange remark that he "thought the friction would go on until the machine stopped." A medical man of large practice and great experience at home would be given the rank of a lieutenant, and so be placed not only as to his rank, but as to the medical treatment of his patient under an Army medical captain or major, who had no experience at all. He could tell the Committee, if time allowed, of several cases where this occurred to the infinite detriment of the patients in the hospital; but he would only mention one. A consulting surgeon of a large hospital, a man of great experience and scientific ability, was attached to a certain hospital in the war, given the rank of lieutenant, and placed under an Army medical major. His requisitions for the barest medical necessities were refused by the major, and he had to go off to a town thirty miles away and buy them himself, which proved they could easily have been got; his prescriptions were revised by the major; cases of internal operations of a most serious and delicate kind were attempted to be removed the clay after by the major; until at last, exasperated and indignant for the patients whose lives were in his charge, the consultant surgeon threatened to punch the major's bead if he came into the wards again. And the major, thinking discretion the better part of what he supposed he would call "discipline," kept out of the wards after that. He thought, considering the number of medical practitioners there were wanting employment, that for purposes of economy to the State, and to avoid a heavy pension list, it might be used to a great extent in peace time. He found nothing about that in the scheme. But it certainly wanted careful organisation beforehand for war time. But there was another and more important form of civilian aid in wax time, which demanded thorough organisation in time of peace They did not want only civilian medical men; they wanted civilian hospital complete and self-contained, organised and ready to go out to a war, either to take over the base hospitals and so free the trained Army medical staff to go up to the front, their proper places or not only staffed but equipped, prepared to he sent up and dotted along the lines of communication as stationary hospitals; or even prepared, if need be, to take the field, as some of them did, gallantly and efficiently in the late war. The Committee would remember—and the country would always remember—the splendid part played in the medical history of the war by the great system of civilian hospitals voluntarily and generously provided from England—from Scotland, from Ireland, from Wales, aye, and even from the colonies. But they could not rely, in providing a formal scheme for the medical needs of their Army, they had no right to rely upon the generosity and patriotism of private people. Those noble sentiments would, no doubt, always exist, but a hundred causes might prevent their taking this particular form. But if they could not rely on what was done being done again in the same way, and from the same sources, they could at least take it to a certain extent as a model, and improve on it, and make it a certainty. They could create a system of medical units for war time in connection with the large civilian hospitals and great medical schools, units with staff equipment and training, ready to go out, and engaged to go out, to a war when called on. His hon. friend the Member for Edinburgh University made some interesting remarks about this last year. But eighteen months before that, in February, 1901, a scheme of that kind, and one upon the lines of which any satisfactory scheme in the future must be founded, was drawn up by a gentleman of great military-medical experience, and one who played a very important part, not only a practical but an originating part, in the system of voluntary civilian hospitals in the late war, and was laid before the Secretary of State for War. Long before that, he himself constantly and publicly urged the provision of some such scheme, because it was the only means by which they could place the medical service, at a moment's notice, on a war footing—with a due regard to efficiency and economy. It would save the country from "bloated armaments" in peace time, in the shape of an excessive Royal Army Medical Corps and a heavy pension list; it would save the lives and the health of our soldiers in war time, by providing them with a better medical service than they could get from any other source. What had become of this scheme and this proposal? Was it still in the state it was last October when the Director-General, speaking to the civil profession, eloquently advocated "the establishment in time of peace of medical units for service when war comes," and the perfect organisation of such units, and said—"Where are volunteer field ambulances?"—he used the word "volunteer" not in connection with that branch of the Army but as applied to the great medical schools—"above all where are our volunteer general hospitals?" And he, speaking nine months after that, but three years after the proposal was publicly put forward and argued, asked where were these things? Where was this scheme? It was an integral part of any real and effective reform of the Army Medical Service it was absolutely essential, in order to avert another disaster in war-time. It required thought and study and organisation, and careful co-ordination with the normal Army Medical Service—all of which could only be done in peace days. Where was it? What had been done, or what was being done with regard to it? He trusted the Committee would par don him for having addressed them at such length on this Vote. It involved a matter literally of life and death to the Army—the well-being and health of our soldiers in time of peace; and in war time the saving them from death, which comes, he thought, in its most pathetic form, not on the field of battle, but in hospital. They had no reason to complain; they never had had and never should have any reason than to be other than proud, of the courage and efficiency of the Army medical officer on the field of battle. The history of the South African war was illuminated by many brilliant examples of those qualities to which no one had been more anxious to do full justice than himself. But they must bear in mind that no amount of coolness and heroism in the field could make up for an imperfect and ill-organised medical system, which was detected by the hospital in war time. No gallant dash to save a wounded lean and carry him back under heavy fire no steady imperturbable dressing of wounds in the zone of the quick-firing rifle could supply the place of that careful organisation and that combined economy and efficiency which they, as Members of Parliament, ought to demand in this department of the Army. All their efforts for reform should be directed to these aspects of the question.
said he fully recognised the services which his hon. friend had rendered in bringing this question forward. In the changes that had been suggested it was recognised that it was highly important that they should not rely on anything that might become stereotyped in the department, arid in order to avoid that they had enlisted the services of leading members of the medical profession who were in closest touch with the most recent medical developments of the day. They had been peculiarly fortunate in this respect. He had invited some of the most eminent members of the medical profession to assist him in the organisation of the department; and he could not express too strongly his gratitude to those gentlemen who had given up high fees and personal practice to sit with him on a Committee in the months of June and July giving up their time frequently from five o'clock in the afternoon to eight o'clock in the evening probing this question to the very bottom, and, having done that, had expressed themselves willing to serve on the Advisory Board at a mere nominal honorarium in order adequately to reorganize the Army Medical Department upon which so many lives depended and which embraced so many medical men. Besides the Army medical members, the Advisory Board consisted of five eminent civilian doctors and surgeons, including Sir Charles Ball, Dr. Fripp, and Sir Frederick Treves. These, gentlemen had been most constant in their attendance, attending three or four Committees a week. He thought it was, most unusual in any scientific profession to find professional men willing to give so much time to public objects. The' War Office had endeavoured to meet their views with regard to pay, with regard to the increase in numbers, and, what was more important, with regard to the increase of leave for study to be carried out in the Medical College, for which a site had been secured. In future they would be able to obtain their knowledge' of the medical profession in the very best centres for scientific research. With regard to nursing, the men had been given a special rate of pay, and the female nursing service, organised by Her Majesty the Queen, contained the very best nurses in the profession. Previous, to the appointment of the Advisory Board, the number of candidates was not equal to the vacancies, but since the number of candidates had increased, and. at the last examination there were 32 candidates for 30 vacancies, and he understood that some of the candidates held positions as house-surgeons in the best hospitals in London. The Advisory Board had made a review of the whole of the military hospitals of the United Kingdom, in which review one of the civil members had always taken part; and he hoped they were on the eve of many great changes, in the way of not treating so many trifling cases in hospital, n having much better equipment, more scientific structures, and a general modernising of the institutions. He had asked the House for a sum of £150,000, which he proposed to entrust to a small Committee of which Sir C. Perry, now a most active and responsible official at Guy's, would be the chairman. That Committee would apportion the money among the various hospitals with a view to securing their modernisation. An other point was the organisation of an adequate civilian reserve and the definition of their status as compared with the Army Medical Corps. He hoped that before the House met again he might be in a position to tell his hon. friend and the House that these were all accomplished facts. His hon. friend the Member for Westminster had alluded to one or two other subjects. The points he had brought out during the war in South Africa were subjects which required to be brought out, and the fact that the hon. Member had been on the spot amply justified him in bringing them out, and by taking that course he rendered a great service to the country. Nevertheless he maintained that during the war the Army Medical Corps amidst great difficulties did their duty with the most absolute self-denial and success under a system in which organisation was wanted more than initiative, and which organisation had never up to that time been asked for by the House of Commons. All he could say now was that they recognised those difficulties, and personally he was grateful to his hon. friend the Member for Westminster for the share he had taken in suggesting remedies.
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called attention to the inadequate equipment of Fort George with surgical instruments. He thought the right hon. Gentleman ought to see that more up-to-date instruments were supplied to the hospital at Fort George. He hoped the Secretary of State for War would look into this matter. Some years ago he went down to Aldershot, and he was surprised to find that the surgical instruments in use there were of the most ancient order. They had been slightly improved since, but very little.
replied that two members of the Board were making inquiries into this matter.
said he felt that the point which he desired to bring before the Committee was one which ought not to be allowed to pass without some kind of comment—he alluded to the practice of giving military titles to medical men. He was aware that this was a very delicate subject to touch upon, but it seemed to him that the present titles should not be given to the medical profession, and the different grades of Army surgeons might be met by such titles as assistant-surgeon, surgeon, field-surgeon, and others. Special privileges might be given in regard to service, the granting of emoluments, and other things. For certain reasons concessions had been made to medical clamour by granting certain titles, but be was convinced that as regarded the Army itself no good whatever had been done by allowing the medical profession to assume military titles.
thought the hon. Member for Westminster must be astonished, although no doubt pleased, at the very changed tone in the reception of his criticisms. It was not owing to the War Office, but to the hon. Member and a few others, that attention was called to the gross insufficiency and the scandalous mismanagement of the medical arrangements at the beginning of the war. The loss of many lives, and the amount of sickness and torture and misery endured by our soldiers, officers as well as men, were due to the culpable mismanagement of the right hon. Gentleman now sitting on the Treasury Bench. ("Oh, oh.")
I must beg the hon. Member to moderate his language, and to observe, first of all, that I was not at the War Office at the time he refers to, and that I took the full responsibility, when the War Office was organised to send 70,000 men abroad, of sending 250,000 men. Perhaps the hon. Member will withdraw the observation he has made. From the point of view of the comity that exists among Members of this House he will withdraw a charge which he cannot substantiate. [MINISTERIAL cries of "Withdraw."]
said, in so far as the right hon. Gentleman corrected him by the reminder that he was not then Secretary for War, he acknowledged that he was in error; but the Government of which the right hon. Gentleman was a Member did not make anything like adequate provision in the medical department for the exigencies of the war. That was only one part—the right hon. Gentleman might ride off on that plea if he liked—of the gross mismanagement and want of foresight shown in every matter connected with the inception of the war. In no Government Department had the want of foresight been so remarkable as in regard to the Army Medical Corps. It was well remembered how the hon. Member for Westminster was received by the Prime Minister and other responsible Ministers when he first reported what he had seen in South Africa. The improvement in the Medical Department now, and the future improvements contemplated, were the result of a very tardy repentance on the part of the Ministers of the Crown, and were due mainly to the perseverance, fortitude, industry, and courage of the hon. Member for Westminster, and those who acted with him.
called attention to an item of £5,000 for an expeditionary force in China. The China expeditionary force was sent out more than a year ago, and he could not understand how it came about that at this time of day the Committee should be asked to pay £5,000 for this purpose. He wished to know how it was that they were now called upon to pay this item.
said the reason was that certain accounts had not been rendered at the commencement of last Sear, but as they knew they would come in during tire present year they now asked for money to meet those charges.
said he understood that some expense was still going on in regard to this force, which could hardly be called an expeditionary force at the present time. He thought there should be a distinction drawn in the estimates between the money spent on the war in China and that spent for the maintenance and protection of the Legation.
Vote agreed to.
2. £1,838,000, Transports and Re mounts.
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called attention to the small establishment of horses. At the present moment, although the number of horses of cavalry regiments had been slightly increased there was still a very small number of horses of effective age. The number of horses per squadron kept up in connection with British cavalry regiments was smaller than that of any other army in the world. They did not average more than 110 horses per squadron. He believed that the number of men justified at least 135 horses per squadron, and he wished to press the Government if necessary, rather to reduce the number of cadres than keep up so small an establishment of horses.
said he had more than once had meetings with officers of cavalry regiments on this subject. It was not altogether merely a matter of horses. The officers stated that, having regard to the number of men, they could not with advantage take more horses than they had already got. Consequently, while he agreed with the right hon. Baronet, he was in the hands of the military authorities, who said they got all the horses they could manage, considering the work the men had to do. If the War Office gave them all they wasted they could do no more.
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You ought to be able to do as well as any other cavalry in the world. There is no other cavalry with so small a proportion of horses.
There is something peculiar about the British Army in many ways In most cases it spends more than any army in the world. In this case it spends less.
thought the right hon. Gentleman should take this criticism more seriously to heart. The right hon. Gentleman had informed the Committee that he had frequently made representations on this subject, and that, so far, he had not been able to get any further, because the officers of cavalry regiments had pointed out that they had so many men engaged in other duties that it would be impossible to keep more horses employed. But surely that was a most ridiculous state of things. When every other country could keep up a proper establishment of horses we might be expected to have the very best and most efficient. He would suggest that, if the commanders of cavalry regiments said it was impossible to have this under the present plan, a change should be made in the plan, which was admitted to be not entirely creditable. He asked the right hon. Gentleman to give this matter further attention.
said the present supply of horses was adequate to mount the men and take them into the field. He was in full agreement with his hon. friend, and he could assure him it was not a question of parsimony, but whether he should dictate to the War authorities to keep a larger number of horses than they wanted to keep.
asked for imformation with respect to the hired transports for bringing home the troops from South Africa. The amount taken this year was £812,500. He wanted to know how many hired transports there were at present. He supposed that the work of bringing home the troops from South Africa was nearly finished. There had been very considerable waste in this respect, a great many transports having been kept practically idle. Had the Admiralty no hospital ships at all I He found in connection with the China expedition that a hospital ship was hired from the Peninsular and Oriental Company, and it remained out there for many months.
said he could not give the hon. Member full details in regard to the number of ships that had been engaged in transport work. What happened was this. Requests were made by the War Office for ships, and the Transport Department of the Admiralty furnished the transports. In some cases they were kept for considerable periods of time, waiting for troops coming back. That was necessary during the war, but not now. Every care was taken to get the transports at market rates. The question of hospital ships for the Army was a totally different matter. The number of transport ships had been considerably diminished, and now they were limited to the number required to bring troops from South Africa from time to time.
said this was a vague and general answer which conveyed no information whatever. It was at this time more than any other that there was likely to be waste. There was an item of £719,900 for hired transports, and the Committee expected a little information regarding it. How many hired transports had they on hand?
said the actual number of hired transports was two. If more were required at a later stage they would be hired.
Exactly, but why could you not give us that information when it was asked? Now perhaps you can tell us whether the cost is £1 per ton per month.
said he kept the most careful watch on the use of these transports. They had an enormous number of moves going on as between South Africa, the Mediterranean, and this country early in the year. That caused a very heavy charge for transports. There were at the beginning of the year about thirty transports employed; hut, as the Secretary to the Admiralty had stated, the number was now reduced to, two.
thought it high time that Parliament should be informed as to the rate at which transports were hired for service during the war. A categorical promise was given by Lord Goschen at the beginning of the war that the information should be furnished when the war was concluded.
said the right hon. Gentleman had not given a satisfactory answer to the question of sea transports. The item they were now asked to vote was three times the amount normally required. How was it that so long after the conclusion of the war there should be these swollen figures? What they were anxious for was that as soon as possible they might get back to the normal figures in this respect.
said he had already explained that an enormous number of moves had taken place this year. The War Office had hardly got credit for what they had done since the close of the war. They had discharged 160,000 men since the war ended. There was no one in the House more interested than himself in economic administration. When they further reduced the Estimates the figures referred to would be much lower.
said the Committee should get some information as to the rates at which the transports were hired. It was in February, 1900, Lord Goschen, who was then First Lord of the Admiralty, stated that at the conclusion of the war full particulars would be furnished in regard to the chartering of ships.
said the Admiralty had not the slightest objection to give these particulars in a Parliamentary Return.
asked what the charge of £70,000 for the China expedition was based on. Did it apply entirely to last year? If so it did not seem to him to be a satisfactory way of keeping the accounts. He thought there was plenty of time, when the Estimates were being prepared, to get some particulars from India as to the exact amount. When he turned to the Somaliland charges he found the amount was £170,000. That seemed to him the cost of a little war itself. Was that the total item for Somaliland, a ad might the Committee assume that no more money would be wanted? What were the chief heads of the expenses here?
The sea transport charges, to which the hon. Gentleman called attention, were payments made when the transports were discharged. The proceeds of the sale of animals were, of course, larger at the end of a war than in a normal year. In regard to the two expeditions in China and Somaliland, transport and remounts involved the largest portion of this charge. He would welcome the day when it was possible to bring the Indian troops from China and place them on the charge of India; but the hon. Member would understand that, seeing the trouble had so recently subsided in the portions of China where those troops were, the Government must not be asked to come to too precipitate a decision on the subject. They had, however, reduced the troops to one quarter of the former number.
asked what force there was at present in China.
said he thought there were about 3,200 men. Then, as regarded the Somaliland Vote, the same answer applied as to the China Vote.
said he did not see why they should have 3,000 men in China. There were at one time 700 or 800 men at Shanghai, and they all knew that the French, German, and British troops had gone away from that place. Then, in Peking, there was only the normal guarding for guarding the Embassy, which could not amount to more than 500 at the outside. It must be useful to the Government to know that the Germans had three or four times the number of officers at Peking and Tient-sin the British had, so that they would be able to fill up details at once on an emergency.
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said he would like to know where our forces in China were stationed. The last time he was in Shanghai there were very few British troops.
said that if the hon. Member were to go there again he would find some British forces in Shanghai and some in Hong-Kong.
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said that the new barracks at Hong-Kong would not be finished for two or three years yet. The right hon. Gentleman was not purposely misleading the Committee, but it would be well if he were to mark, learn, and inwardly digest what had been said, and see that the officials at the War Office furnished him with accurate information. As the representative of Ross and Cromarty, he did not come there to vote hundreds of thousands of pounds, aye millions, without any information.
said if the Secretary for War included the troops in Hong-Kong he might make up 3,000; but he would inform the right hon. Gentleman that Hong-Kong was not part of the expedition to China. It was a British settlement and was under the Colonial Office. Ho hoped the Secretary fur War would look up the matter, and discriminate between the expenditure which belonged to the British colony of Hong-Kong, and that which related to the China expedition. The Vote was far too large for the British force which was in China.
Vote agreed to.
Motion made, and Question proposed, "That a sum, not exceeding £1,822,000, be granted to His Majesty, to defray the Charge for Clothing Establishments and Services, which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March 1904."
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said he did not propose to raise the question of wages at the Pimlico Clothing Establishment, but there was one grievance there which he was quite certain ought to be looked into by the War Office. A circular had recently been issued by the Home Office in regard to sanitary accommodation in factories, and he was certain that the accommodation of that description at Pimlico was below the Home Office standard.
said that inquiry was being made into this matter, and if the sanitary accommodation at Pimlico was below the standard, steps would be taken to remedy it.
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said that in the case of contractors who infringed the fair wages Resolution of the House, the Department was always willing to receive a deputation on the subject from the trade union. He saw no reason why the same course should not be followed in regard to the men, and the women, who were in an even more unfortunate position—namely, those employed in Government factories. The employees in the Pimlico factory should be allowed to make their grievances known direct to the War Office through the medium of the trade union organization. He knew the arrogance of the overseers and foremen towards the workmen. He had a letter from an employee in the Pimlico factory who had made an appeal to the overseer, and he was referred to "Bill Crooks to answer it." No official had the right to answer a workman's request in that manner.
said he quite saw what the hon. Member desired, but the rule of the Government had always been, and he hoped it always would be, to deal direct with its own employees. The Government, he hoped, was a good employer, and they had every desire to give good employment, and deal fairly with their workpeople. But the Government had never given any recognition to the idea that outside intermediaries should come in between them and those whom they employed. Such a course, he thought, would not tend either to smooth working, or to a good understanding between employer and employed in Government service. He could assure the hon. Menber that if the men or women were dissatisfied they were perfectly free to ventilate their grievances, and to approach the authorities on the matter, and he would take care that they would not be penalised for doing so.
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said that that was a very unsatisfactory statement by the right hon. Gentleman, and he begged to move that the Vote be reduced by £100. The right hon. Gentleman said that these poor people in the factories need have no fear in making complaints; but he could give twenty cases in which the over lookers or foremen said to the workmen, "You can complain if you like, but if you do, bear in mind that we shall remember you." Was not that coercion? He had always found that the people who had been paid at the lowest rate of wages lacked moral courage. That had been taken out of them long ago; and they should be allowed to make their representations through their unions.
Motion made, and Question put, "That a sum not exceeding £1,821,900 be granted for the said Service."—( Mr. Crooks.)
said he wished to put it to the Secretary for War that, in his reply to the hon. Member for Woolwich, he did not at all deal with the logical point which the hon. Member had raised. That point was, why did the officers of State and the members of the Government receive deputations from outside combinations of workmen in respect of alleged contraventions of the regulations by contractors who employed the workmen, but refused to receive similar deputations from those who had adopted the grievances of workmen in the direct employment of the Government. He awaited with considerable interest and with an entirely open mind the explanation of his right hon. friend.
said the distinction between the two cases which the hon. Member for Woolwich had raised was this Those employed in the service had a right to approach the heads of the Department direct; whereas, the workers under contractors, who might be doing other business outside Government business, had no right of access to the Government. In the latter case, if a representation was made to the Government, they called on the contractors for an explanation as to whether the rules which this House had set up had been observed. In the former case, they looked after their own workmen.
said he would let a little daylight into this matter. The right hon. Gentleman, said the Government would not allow any outside interference between it and its employees But what was the channel of communication between the Government employees and the Government? It was by petition, and these petitions were sent in year by year, and the men were led to suppose that they would receive a prompt reply. The Committee would probably be surprised to know that that was not acted upon in any sense. He knew of a petition which had been sent in, in 1902, to which no reply had yet been given, and when he addressed a question last week to the Secretary to the Admiralty on the subject, the only satisfaction he got was that the matter was still being considered. The only opportunity the workpeople in Pimlico had of ventilating their grievances was by sending in petitions, and the right hon. Gentleman ought to make inquiries into the matter He was glad to see the Secretary to the Admiralty present.
Order, order This is rot an Admiralty Vote.
said that the only way these workpeople had to ventilate their grievances was by petition.
asked if the hon. Gentleman suggested that the Pimlico, petition was disregarded.
said yes, absolutely. No reply had been given to the petition, and he should be glad to know if the right hon. Gentleman intended to remedy that state of affairs. He thought the Committee ought to have a definite pledge that replies would be given to, such petitions.
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said he wished the right hon. Gentleman would consider that this was a matter which had been recognised by employers of labour throughout the country. This House recognised over thirty years ago the right of workpeople to organise in the only way possible, namely, by appointing men in whom they had confidence to lay their case before the employers. In this case the employer was the War Office; and surely the right hon. Gentleman would not deny that these workpeople had a perfect right to appoint the man whom they considered best able to present their case to the officers appointed by the right hon. Gentleman to investigate it. The attitude of the right hon. Gentleman was most inconsistent. He stated that the applications for work were more numerous than the employment necessitated. That was the whole secret of the situation, and that was why the right hon. Gentleman ignored the trades union representative. The action of the Government was altogether wrong, and ought not to be tolerated. Trades unionists throughout the country would not read with pleasure the refusal of the right hon. Gentleman to receive a trades union representative. He hoped his hon. friend would take a division.
said he felt bound to associate himself with the views of Vie hon. Gentle man the Member for Devonport, because his experience was much the same as that of the hon. Gentleman. He, however, was persuaded that the Government did not desire to deal unfairly with their employees; and in that respect he differed from the hon. Gentleman. He thought, however, that the Government did not appreciate the difficulty of employees in putting their case forward. The Government should remember that it was not easy for the men to be their own advocates. They were very often, if he might say so, inarticulate, and found it very difficult to state their own case, although he entirely exonerated the Government from trying to take an unfair advantage of their employees.
said he desired to state that the hon. Member for Devonport was under an entire misapprehension. There was no disinclination on the part of Government employees to place their views before a particular Department. It was stated that there had been some delay, but that, he believed, was also a misapprehension. Perhaps hon. Members were not aware of the volume of petitions received by Government Departments. Their consideration involved immense detail, and it could not be expected that an immediate answer could be given to them.
said that six months was a fair time in which to receive an answer.
I called the hon. Member for Devonport to order for discussing the question of Admiralty employees; now the hon. Gentleman the Secretary to the Admiralty is answering the hon. Gentleman the Member for Devonport, but it is quite out of order on this Vote.
said he understood that the hon. Gentleman the Member for Portsmouth had alluded to the matter.
No, the hon. Member did not refer to Admiralty employees, but to Government employees generally.
was surprised to hear that it was the settled policy of the Department not to allow employees to make representations through third parties. He thought such a policy objectionable on two grounds. In the first place, it was nut just, and in the second place, it was inexpedient. The Government employed a great number of extremely poor workers, particularly in the clothing factory, many of whom were women, and they could not make the best of their case when brought face to face with military people and officials in high places. There was no better way of preventing the springing up of disputes than the bringing in of third persons, who could take a calm and impartial view of the situation. It was foolish of the Government not to allow their workpeople to make representations to them through their own trade union officials.
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said that a grave matter of principle was involved, and the problems which were presented by the relations between the State and its employees would not be rendered less difficult or delicate by refusing to recognise trade unionism. A few years ago the House of Commons passed a Resolution which asserted the principle that the Government should be a model employer of labour. Certainly no employer of labour could be regarded as a model employer who refused to treat with trade union representatives. The principle of collective bargaining was at the root of the settlement of all industrial difficulties. In many industries, certainly in the great industries in the North of England, employers preferred that the men should be trade unionists. The right hon. Gentleman now set up a principle which had been rejected by every progressive employer of labour throughout the country. The right hon. Gentleman said that he refused to negotiate with workmen through the medium of third parties. In the next breath he said that he was ready to receive representations on behalf of the workmen from Members of Parliament. How could the right hon. Gentleman distinguish between the two cases? No doubt it was necessary to have military discipline in the case of those who were to serve in the field. But these ideas of discipline that reigned at the War Office ought not to be applied to its Civil establishments. The doctrine which the right hon. Gentleman had enunciated would be an encouragement to every reactionary employer of labour throughout the country.
said he could not agree with the argument which had been advanced by the hon. Gentleman who had just spoken; and he confessed he was very much surprised at the views put forward by the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Cambridge University. He was glad his right hon. friend the Secretary of State for War had taken up the position he did on that occasion. It was quite refreshing in these days to hear of a Minister having sufficient courage to say that he would not allow any outside interference with his Department. In no Department of the Government should any outside interference of any sort or kind be allowed. The curse of the country at the present time was trade union agitation; and he hoped that his right hon. friend would adhere to the position he had taken up.
said that the hon. Member who had just spoken had not perhaps had much experience of trade disputes. If he had had such experience, he would not have made the speech he had just delivered. He entirely agreed with the hon. Member for Portsmouth that the Government were not trying to get the better of their employees. He could not conceive any Government being so stupid as to attempt that. With reference to collective bargaining, he confessed from his own experience that he would rather deal with a trained negotiator than with a man appointed, so to speak, ad hoc to represent the case of his fellow workmen. It was not that there might be any inability to state the case, but the trained negotiator knew when to give way, and realised when the argument against him was sensible. The untrained negotiator did not know when to give way, or when sense and reason were with the other side and he went into the negotiation prepared to say practically what was put into his mouth. He was convinced that the Government, if proper safeguards were adopted, would achieve more satisfactory results if they negotiated with the man appointed by the workpeople than by adopting the unfortunate method which led to such a long continued war in connection with the Penrhyn quarries.
said he thought the thanks of the Committee were due to the hon. Member for Woolwich for raising what was after all one of the most important questions connected with Government Departments. So far as he understood it, it resolved itself into a question of trades unionism or no trades unionism. He regretted very much the speech of the hon. and gallant Gentleman opposite. The hon. and gallant Gentleman advised the Government to stand against the interference of anyone connected with trades unions. He would be very much surprised if the hon. and gallant Gentleman delivered such a speech to his constituents. The question they had to consider was that the work-people believed, rightly or wrongly, they could not place their grievances before the heads of the Department. The facts in the present case were that the petition was presented last September, and that, up to the present, no reply had been received. His point was that the present system was not successful. If the right hon. Gentleman would adopt the suggestion that the men themselves should appoint a spokesman that might meet the difficulty. He did not think the right hon. Gentleman was unsympathetic but he was a busy man; and it was impossible for him to examine into the details of various branches of his Department. If the Resolution of the House was to be effective no bar should be placed in the way of complaints as to its failure being investigated. He would suggest that the right hon. Gentleman might meet the complaint by ordering a special inquiry into the difficulty of presenting grievances.
said there never was the slightest difficulty about the employees of the War Office seeing the heads of the Department.
said the right hon. Gentleman had made a statement that the Pimlico Clothing Factory workpeople could appoint from among themselves a deputation which he was willing to receive. Was that the case?
I said there had never been the slightest difficulty in the employees of the War Office approaching the heads of the Department.
said that in reply to a communication the right hon. Gentleman had indicated his willingness to consider any complaints of the employees which might be forwarded through the proper channels, but he declined to recognise their union as the intermediary. His claim was that the union ought to be recognised.
The letter also states that I would see any individual employees.
said he was content to rest his case on the words "I must decline to recognise the union or receive any deputation which may purport to convey the views of the members." Surely the employees were the best judges as to how and by whom they wished their grievances to be represented. The issue now really was—"trades unions, or no trades unions."
hoped the Committee would support the right hon. Gentleman in the position which he had taken up, and which was in accordance with the universal practice of the Government. The only logical course open to the right hon. Gentleman was to decline to allow outsiders to come in and inter- fere with the organisation of a Government Department, and hon. Members would surely support him in that.
*
said the attitude of the War Office and that of the Post Office was totally indefensible, and it was impossible to maintain it. Scarcely a year in the last twenty-seven had passed in which he had not discussed grievances with the employees in the Army Clothing Department. They had real grievances, and there was serious difficulty in putting them before the Secretary of State. The majority of the employees were poor women, not of a class who were able to state their grievances. If any skilled lady inspector of factories could see the employees she would be able to bring the case before the right hon. Gentleman in a way it had not been brought up to the present time.
said the principle of allowing the employees themselves to put their grievances forward was a right one, and he thought the Government ought to be supported in the position they had taken up.
said the idea of being willing to see individuals but not persons representing them, was the old ground taken up by the most determined opponents of labour combination and organisation. It was not the policy adopted in all Government Departments. For instance the Commissioner of Works was in constant communication with a powerful trades-union of which he was a member.
Surely not with regard to the wages paid to its own permanent employees.
said the communications had reference to the conditions of work, hours, etc., and that indirectly at any rate affected labour. The War Office was the last Department in the world that should take unto itself any air of superiority in any way whatsoever. He had himself had a long experience in connection with the Army Clothing Department. He had been associated with the grievances of the employees for more than thirty years, mostly in the days when he was Parliamentary Secretary to the Trades Union Congress and when Mr. Childers was Secretary of State for War. He once arranged a deputation with that right hon. Gentleman in the old Conference room, and after listening to the women for about ten minutes, Mr. Childers begged leave to withdraw, and begged him to make any terms possible with the workers in that particular Department. The attitude now taken up by the Secretary for War was one which must prevent the administrative work of a Department being successfully carried on, and he hoped the Government as a whole did not accept the right hon. Gentleman's views.
said that if the members employed in the Army Clothing Department had reason to complain and made their complaints through the proper channels—through their own superior officer—he was ready to see them. But he was not ready to recognise unions of the workers.
*
Why not?
The Government never has dealt with any of its employees—postmen, policemen, soldiers or sailors through a union.
*
said the right hon. Gentleman by quoting the cases of soldiers, sailors, and policemen was simply confusing the issue, because they stood in an entirely different position from ordinary working people. The right hon. Gentleman had frequently stated that he would not receive a deputation from an outside organisation, but he had not yet given any reasons for adopting this attitude.
while thoroughly agreeing with the Secretary of State for War in regard to this question, suggested that he should avail himself of the services of one of the women factory inspectors who should inquire into the conditions of employment of women in the Pimlico factory.
pointed out that in the case which had been quoted in which the Chief Ordnance Officer refused to receive a deputation from the union, it was simply a union of Government employees. The right hon. Gentleman had said he would be very glad to see individuals or bodies representing those individuals, and in this case why not receive the representatives of the individuals' union. Did the right hon. Gentleman make any differentiation? Did he merely refuse to receive outside unions or did he also ref use to receive representatives of unions of any kind whatsoever?
hoped the right hon. Gentleman would be prepared to make some small concession and thus avoid a division. Why not adopt the suggestion of the right hon. Baronet the Member for the Forest of Dean, backed up by the recommendation of the hon. and gallant Member for the Epping Division, and appoint an independent lady inspector to hear the grievances of these women and ascertain the cause of the dissatisfaction which existed as to the presentation of grievances. Let the enquiry even be confidential, if desired. If the right hon. Gentleman refused to adopt that suggestion the case was hopeless.
said they heard a great deal now-a-days about the necessity of introducing business-like, methods into their administration. They were all agreed that the trades union movement in this country had been most serviceable to the men, and a useful means of getting rid of friction between employers and employed. Why should not the War Office, in its own interest, try to utilise this method of dealing with the grievances of its employees. If it had some antiquated notion about improper interference, it was most stupid. The course which had been followed was stupid, and it was time to have done with stupidity. Why did not the War Office utilise to the best of their ability the lessons which the common sense of the country had taught in the matter of trade disputes? The classes who had no power to speak for themselves were the least represented, and Government offices and Departments ought to have some consideration for those who could not help themselves. He hoped some guarantee would be given that in this little matter the affairs of the War Office would be conducted on the lines of common sense and business.
thought there was a great difference between receiving a trade union deputation from outside the Pimlico factory and receiving a deputation from inside, because in the latter case although it might be a trade union deputation yet it would be a deputation of the men themselves, who, as far as he knew, were perfectly at liberty to form a union inside the factory, and had a reasonable right to he received. He would be inclined to agree with his right hon. friend in refusing to receive a deputation from inside the factory were it not for the fact that there was frequently the most inordinate delay in getting replies from the War Office. The right hon. Gentleman had not explained why no reply had been given to the representation made last October.
*
joined in the appeal to the Secretary of State to reconsider his decision. It was practically impossible for these poor women to address the right hon. Gentleman; they would tremble in his presence, and be practically dumb. It was only natural that they should desire to have some one used to putting their grievances before the proper authorities. The principle was allowed in the Law Courts; everybody was there allowed to employ an advocate, and all these people asked was that they should be allowed to appoint anyone they pleased as their advocate. It was a right for which trades unions had always contended and which he had hoped had been settled long ago, but it appeared that the battle would have to be fought over again. Scores of cases could be cited in which terrible disasters had resulted from the narrow-minded plea now advanced by the right hon. Gentleman, and many instances had come under his own notice in which, the good sense of the employers having recognised the right of the trades unions to plead the cause of their members, serious struggles had been averted. It was always to the interest of the representatives of trades unions to avoid strikes in order to guard the funds of the unions. Leaders did not make strikes, but strikes made leaders. He sincerely hoped the right hon. Gentleman would concede the point for which they were contending.
thought a middle course might he found which would he acceptable to the Government. He understood the Government objection was to suffer the interference of a large trade union outside their employment, and that he could understand, because a trade union might have some object of their own to gain. But there could not be any reason at all against allowing a deputation from within the employment. He should think the employees would be able to appoint a deputation of their own who could sufficiently represent their grievances. He understood that that was conceded. If, then, any body of employees were not able to represent their case clearly and adequately, there ought not to he any rigid rule which would prevent the right hon. Gentleman and the employees agreeing upon some person to speak on the latter's behalf.
said the hon. and learned Member had stated the ease admirably, but it was just that which the right hon. Gentleman had refused to grant. The words of the right hon. Gentleman were—
"I am prepared to consider any complaints of the employees which may be forwarded through the proper channel, or to listen to any individual who asks to see me through his immediate superior, but I must decline to recognise the trade union as an intermediary, or to receive a deputation which may purport to convey the views of its members."
asked what trade union was referred to.
said it was the Union of Government Workers—people actually in the employment of the Government. If the right hon. Gentleman would consent to receive a deputation of the union, what had now taken him ten months to consider, without arriving at any decision, could be settled in ten minutes.
said the hon. Member for Woolwich and the hon. and learned Member for Warwick were at variance on the very point upon which he was at variance with the proposal which had been made. If any individual, or any deputation, or any body of workmen wished to make representations to him they were perfectly at liberty to do so at any time. He could imagine a case in which a body of workpeople would be unable to speak for themselves and required a spokesman, and he drought there would be no difficulty in arranging for such a case. But what hon. Members opposite desired was that he should recognise what was practically the intervention of an outside union representing other unions—("No").
thought the right hon. Gentleman had not stated the case fairly. What they wanted was that these women or any other body of Government employees should have the right to appoint one of the officials connected with their union—which was entirely composed of Government workers—to represent their case. The official of the union might possibly not be working for the Government; he might have retired from the service; but by constant contact with the work-people he would be better acquainted with the facts as a whole than any individual workman could be. The society with which he was connected consisted of 100,000 workpeople, of whom 60 per cent. were women, and during the last ten years the employers of Lancashire had never refused him a hearing on behalf of the women. He failed to see why the Government should not recognise the same principle.
understood his right hon. friend to agree as to the desirability of any body of workmen being allowed to select a representative of their own in the service of the Department to approach the head of the Department. The Secretary of State had also stated that if through defective education, sex, or other cause, they were unable to state their case properly,
AYES.
| ||
| Barran, Rowland Hirst | Hayne, Rt. Hon. Charles Seale- | Roberts, John Bryn (Eifion) |
| Bolton, Thomas Dolling | Hayter, Rt. Hon. Sir Arthur D. | Rose, Charles Day |
| Broadhurst, Henry | Helme, Norval Watson | Russell, T. W. |
| Buchanan, Thomas Ryburn | Henderson, Arthur (Durham) | Samuel, Herbt. L. (Cleveland) |
| Burt, Thomas | Kearley, Hudson E. | Sinclair, John (Forfarshire) |
| Caldwell, James | Levy, Maurice | Soares, Ernest J. |
| Cawley, Frederick | Lough, Thomas | Spencer, Rt. Hn C. R. (Northants |
| Cremer, William Randal | Lucas, Reg'ld J. (Portsmouth) | Sullivan, Donal |
| Dalziel, James Henry | M'Arthur, William (Cornwall) | Ure, Alexander |
| Delany, William | M'Laren, Sir Charles Benjamin | Weir, James Galloway |
| Devlin, Joseph (Kilkenny, N.) | Moss, Samuel | White, Luke (York, E.R.) |
| Dewar, John A. (Inverness-sh. | Murphy, John | Whitley, J. H. (Halifax) |
| Dilke, Rt. Hon. Sir Charles | O'Brien, P. J (Tipperary, N.) | Wilson, Henry (York, W. R.) |
| Doogan, P. C. | O'Mara, James | |
| Emmott, Alfred | Partington, Oswald | TELLERS FOR THE AYES— |
| Fuller, J. M. F. | Priestley, Arthur | Mr. Crooks and Mr. |
| Griffith, Ellis J. | Redmond, William (Clare) | Shackleton. |
NOES.
| ||
| Anson, Sir William Reynell | Fisher, William Hayes | Milvain, Thomas |
| Arkwright, John Stanhope | Fitzroy, Hon. Edward Algeron | Morgan, D. J. (Walthamstow) |
| Arnold-Forster, Hugh O. | Forster, Henry William | Morrell, George Herbert |
| Atkinson, Right Hon. John | Fyler, John Arthur | Morrison, James Archibald |
| Bagot, Capt. Josceline. FitzRoy | Gordon, Hn.J. E. (Elgin & Nrn. | Murray, Rt. Hn A. Graham (Bute |
| Balfour, Rt. Hn. G. W. (Leeds | Gordon, J. (Londonderry, S.) | Murray, Charles J. (Coventry) |
| Banbury, Sir Frederick George | Gore Hn G. R. C. Ormsby-(Salop | Murray, Col. Wyndham (Bath) |
| Blundell, Colonel Henry | Greene, Hy. D. (Shrewsbury) | Myers, William Henry |
| Boscawen, Arthur Griffith | Greene, W. Raymond (Cambs | Palmer, Walter (Salisbury) |
| Brodrick, Rt. Hon. St. John | Guest, Hon. Ivor Churchill | Parkes, Ebenezer |
| Burdett-Coutts, W. | Hamilton, Rt Hn Ld.G (Midx | Percy,Earl |
| Butcher, John George | Harris, Frederick Leverton | Pierpoint, Robert |
| Campbell, J. H. M (Dublin Univ. | Heath, Arthur H. Hanley) | Pretyman, Ernest George |
| Carson, Rt. Hon. Sir Edw. H. | Heath, James (Staffords., N. W. | Pryce-Jones, Lt.-Col. Edward |
| Cavendish, V. C. W. (Derbysh.) | Hermon-Hodge, Sir Robert T. | Purvis, Robert |
| Cecil, Evelyn (Aston Manor) | Hogg, Lindsay | Randles, John S. |
| Chamberlain, Rt.Hon. J. (Birm. | Kemp, Lieut.-Colonel George | Rasch, Major Frederic Carne |
| Chamberlain Rt Hn J A (Worc. | Kennaway, Rt. Hon. Sir J. H. | Reid, James (Greenock) |
| Charrington, Spencer | Keswick, William | Remnant, Jas. Farquharson |
| Cochrane, Hon. Thos. H. A. E. | Law, Andrew Bonar (Glasgow | Renwick, George |
| Colomb, Sir. John Charles Ready | Lawson, J. Grant (Yorks., N. R. | Ritchie, Rt. Hn. C. Thomson |
| Corbett, T. L. (Down, North) | Lee Arthur H (Hants. Fareham) | Round, Rt. Hon. James |
| Craig, Charles Curtis (Antrim S. | Lees, Sir Elliott (Birkenhead) | Rutherford, John (Lancashire) |
| Cranborne, Viscount | Legge, Col. Hon. Heneage | Sackville, Col. S. G. Stopford |
| Crossley, Rt. Hon. Sir Savile | Leveson-Gower, Frederick N.S. | Sandys, Lt.-Col. Thos. Myles |
| Davenport, William Bromley | Lockwood, Lieut.-Col. A. R. | Scott, Sir S. (Marylebone, W.) |
| Dickson, Charles Scott | Loder, Gerald Walter Erskine | Seely, Maj J.E.B. (Isle of Wight |
| Douglas, Rt. Hon. A. Akers | Lonsdale, John Brownlee | Shaw-Stewart, M. H. (Renfrew |
| Duke, Henry Edward | Lowther, C. (Cumb. Eskdale) | Sinclair, Louis (Romford) |
| Elliot, Hon. A. Ralph Douglas | Lvttelton, Hon. Alfred | Smith, Abel H. (Hertford, E.) |
| Faber, E. B. (Hants, W.) | Macdona, John Cumming | Smith, James Parker (Lanarks.) |
| Faber, George Denison (York) | M'Arthur, Charles (Liverpool) | Smith, Hn. W. F. D.(Strand) |
| Fellowes, Hon. Ailwyn Ed. | M'Killop, Jas. (Stirlingshire) | Spear, John Ward |
| Fergusson, Rt Hn. Sir. J. (Manc'r | Majendie, James A. H. | Stanley, Hon. A. (Ormskirk) |
| Finlay, Sir Robert Bannatyne | Maxwell, W.J.H.(Dumhfriessh. | Stanley, Lord (Lancs.) |
he had no objection to assistance being given. That being so, he failed to see what more was required.
Question put.
The Committee divided:—Ayes 47; Noes 118. (Division List No. 207.)
| Sturt, Hon. Humphry Napier | Walker, Col. William Hall | Wyndham-Quin, Major W. H. |
| Talbot, Lord E. (Chichester) | Walrond, Rt. Hon. Sir W. H. | |
| Thornton, Percy M. | Warde, Colonel C. E. | TELLERS FOR THE NOES— |
| Tollemache, Henry James | Wortley, Rt. Hon. C. B. Stuart | Sir Alexander Acland- |
| Tomlinson, Sir Wm. E. M. | Wylie, Alexander | Hood and Mr. Anstruther. |
| Valentia, Viscount | Wyndham, Rt. Hon. George |
Original Question put, and agreed to.
Civil Services And Revenue Departments (Supplementary) Estimates, 1903–4
Class Vii
£8,000, Visit of the President of the French Republic.
thought they had some right to complain of the neglect of the House of Commons in this matter. He wished to know how many tickets were placed at the disposal of the Government for the Opera-house, and why some of the tickets were not placed at the disposal of Members of the House of Commons.
thought the Committee should get more details of the item of £8,000. It was a mistake to put down a lump sum and give absolutely no details as to what the money was spent on. He asked the Secretary to the Treasury to give in round figures particulars of this sum.
said that the accounts had not been absolutely made up, but, roughly, it might be said that for the Office of Works for preparing York House, painting, etc., the sum was £1,800; for the Lord Chamberlain's Department for upholstering £2,300; for the Lord Steward for Buckingham Palace expenses and the Opera-house £2,500; and the Master of Horse £100; troops lining the streets, £1,000.
said it was satisfactory to receive these rough figures subdividing the Vote. He hardly thought the money should have been spent without getting some permanent value for it. Would any portion of this expenditure save similar expenditure in the future?
Anything unexpended will be surrendered to the Exchequer. I do not think I can give any further information.
said he would like to know how many tickets for the opera were placed at the disposal of Members of the House of Commons.
Vote agreed to.
£123,334, Ireland Development Grant.
appealed to the Chief Secretary to give a portion of the money to assist in the construction of the railway from Castle comer mine to Kilkenny. That railway would confer permanent benefit on the district through which it ran, and also on the adjoining districts.
said the hon. Member had referred to a project in his own constituency, but he need hardly say that the Irish representatives had all projects in their own districts. He could make out an excellent case for every penny of the money being spent in County Clare. It would not be possible to do much this year, but next year or the year after, when there would be some money to spend, they could consider what should be done with it.
Vote agreed to.
Army (Excesses) 1901–2
Motion made, and Question proposed, "That a sum, not exceeding £100 be granted to His Majesty, to make good Excesses of Army Expenditure beyond the Grants, for the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1902."
said that if the Government had any regard for economy and improved methods of checking expenditure, they ought not to bring on a Vote of this kind at that hour of the morning and at that period of the session. He must say he was amazed when he looked into the Report of the Comptroller and Auditor-General on the accounts at the end of last financial year, that the Committee was not given a fuller opportunity of discussing and considering it. It would be quite sufficient to show the great seriousness of the matters concealed under this Report by calling the attention of the Committee to a few headings. For instance, the Auditor-General drew attention to the circumstances attending participation in fraud; to frauds at Aldershot connected with the payment of wages; to charges for transport insufficiently vouched; to irregularities in accounts; to imperfect vouching, etc. In one case the number of accounts which ought to have been furnished was sixty-three, but only thirteen had been returned, and of these some were of little value. He maintained that this Vote—which involved several millions of pounds—should not be carried through sub silentio and without full and satisfactory explanation by those responsible; and he begged to move the reduction of the Vote by £99.
Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the sum of £1 be granted for the said service."—( Mr. Whitley.)
*
said he quite agreed with the hon. Member that it was very unsatisfactory that the Reports of the Public Accounts Committee, who fully examined these accounts, and of the Auditor-General had not been brought before the House of Commons as was recommended by the National Expenditure Committee. The fact was that it was exceedingly difficult to carry on war expenditure by Estimates, and the War Office must be allowed considerable latitude. Many of the accounts referred to by the hon. Member had been carefully examined by the Public Accounts Committee, who were of the unanimous opinion, and recommended to the House, that a total Vote should be granted in order to make up deficiencies.
said that before presenting the matter to the Committee he had taken the precaution of submitting it to the Chairman of the Public Accounts. Committee; and he thought that the Report of the Public Accounts Committee called for some statement from the Government as to the action that would be taken to prevent similar irregularities in the future.
Question put.
| The Committee divided:—Ayes, 25; Noes, 116. (Division List No. 208.) |
AYES.
| ||
| Barran, Rowland Hirst | Griffith, Ellis J. | Sinclair, John (Forfarshire) |
| Bolton, Thomas Dolling | Helme, Norval Watson | Soares, Ernest J. |
| Buchanan, Thomas Ryburn | Levy, Maurice | Sullivan, Donal |
| Caldwell, James | M'Laren, Sir Charles Benj. | Weir, James Galloway |
| Cawley, Frederick | Moss, Samuel | White, Luke (York. E. R.) |
| Cremer, William Randal | O'Brien, P. J. (Tipperary, N.) | |
| Dalziel, James Henry | Partington, Oswald | TELLERS FOR THE AYES |
| Dewar, John A. (Inverness-sh.) | Priestley, Arthur | Mr. Whitley and Mr |
| Dilke, Rt. Hon. Sir Charles | Samuel, Herbt, L.(Cleveland) | Lough. |
| Emmott, Alfred | Shackleton, David James | |
NOES.
| ||
| Anson, Sir William Reynell | Hamilton, Rt. Hn. Ld. G. (Mid'x | Pryce-Jones, Lt.-Col. Edward |
| Arkwright, John Stanhope | Harris, Frederick Leverton | Purvis, Robert |
| Arnold-Forster, Hugh O. | Hayne, Rt. Hon. Charles Seale- | Randles, John S. |
| Atkinson, Right Hon. John | Hayter, Rt Hon Sir Arthur D. | Rasch, Major Frederic Carne |
| Balfour, Rt. Hn. A. J. (Man'r | Heath, Arthur H. (Hanley) | Reid, James (Greenock) |
| Balfour, Rt. Hn. G. W. (Leeds | Heath, James (Staffords., N. W. | Remnant, Jas. Farquharson |
| Bentinck, Lord Henry C. | Hogg, Lindsay | Renwick, George |
| Blundell, Colonel Henry | Kemp, Lieut.-Colonel George | Ritchie, Rt. Hn, C. Thomson |
| Boscawen, Arthur Griffith | Kennaway, Rt. Hon. Sir J. H. | Ropner, Colonel Sir Robert |
| Brodrick, Rt. Hon. St. John | Keswick, William | Round, Rt. Hon. James |
| Campbell, J. H. M. (Dublin Univ | Law, Andrew Bonar (Glasgow | Rutherford, John (Lancashire |
| Cavendish, V C W (Derbysh.) | Lawson, John Grant(Yorks, NR | Sackville, Col. S. G. Stopford |
| Cecil, Evelyn (Aston Manor) | Legge, Col. Hon. Heneage | Scott, Sir S. (Marylebone, W.) |
| Chamberlain, Rt Hon J (Birm | Leveson-Gower, Frederiek N.S. | Seely, Charles Hilton (Lincoln) |
| Chamberlain, Rt Hn. J A (Worc | Loder, Gerald Walter Erskine | Seely, Maj. J.E.B. (Isle of Wight |
| Chapman, Edward | Lonsdale, John Brownlee | Sinclair, Louis (Romford) |
| Charrington, Spencer | Lowther, C. (Cumb, Eskdale) | Smith, Abel H. (Hertford, E.) |
| Cochrane, Hon. Thos. H. A. E. | Lucas, Reg'ld J. (Portsmouth) | Smith, James Parker(Lanarks. |
| Colomb, Sir John Charles Ready | Lyttelton, Hon. Alfred | Smith, Hn. W. F. D. (Strand) |
| Corbett, T. L.(Down, North) | Macdona, John Cumming | Spear, John Ward |
| Craig, Charles Curtis (Antrim, S | M'Arthur, Charles (Liverpool) | Stanley, Hon, Arthur (Ormskirk |
| Cranborne, Viscount | M'Arthur, William (Cornwall) | Stanley, Lord (Lancs.) |
| Crossley, Rt. Hon. Sir Savile | M'Killop, Jas. (Stirlingshire) | Sturt, Hn. Humphrey Napier |
| Davenport, William Bromley | Majendie, James A. H. | Talbot, Lord E. (Chichester) |
| Dickson, Charles Scott | Maxwell, W.J.H. (Dumfriessh.) | Thornton, Percy M. |
| Douglas, Rt. Hon. A. Akers | Milvain, Thomas | Tollemache, Henry James |
| Duke, Henry Edward | Morgan, D. J. (Walthamstow) | Tomlinson, Sir Wm. E. M. |
| Elliot, Hon. A. Ralph Douglas | Morrell, George Herbert | Ure, Alexander |
| Faber, E. B. (Hants, W.) | Morrison, James Archibald | Valentia, Viscount |
| Faber, George Denison (York) | Murray, Rt. Hn A. Graham (Bute | Walker, Col. William Hall |
| Fellowes, Hon. Ailwyn Ed. | Murray, Charles J. (Coventry) | Walrond, Rt. Hn. Sir Wm. H. |
| Fergusson, Rt Hn Sir J. (Manc'r | Murray, Col. Wyndham (Bath) | Warde, Colonel C. E. |
| Fitzroy, Hon. Edward Algernon | Nolan, Col. John P. (Galway, N. | Wortley, Rt. Hon. C. B. Stuart |
| Forster, Henry William | Palmer, Walter (Salisbury) | Wrightson, Sir Thomas |
| Fyler, John Arthur | Parkes, Ebenezer | Wylie, Alexander |
| Gordon, J. (Londonderry, S.) | Peel, Hn Wm. Robert Wellesley | Wyndham, Rt. Hon. George |
| Gore, Hn G. R. C. Ormsby-(Salop | Percy, Earl | |
| Greene, Hy. D. (Shrewsbury) | Pierpoint, Robert | TELLERS FOR THE NOES— |
| Greene, W. Raymond (Cambs | Platt-Higgins, Frederick | Sir Alexander Acland- |
| Guest, Hon. Ivor Churchill | Pretyman, Ernest George | Hood and Mr. Anstruther |
Original Question put, and agreed to.
Resolutions to be reported this day; Committee to sit again this day.
Sugar Convention Expenses And Duties
Resolution reported—"That it is expedient to authorise the payment, out of moneys to be provided by Parliament, of a share of the expenses of the Permanent Commission and of any expenses in connection with the attendance of delegates at the Commission, which may be payable under any Art of the present session to make provision for giving effect to a Convention signed the 5th day of March, 1902, in relation to sugar. That the duties payable under Section 2 of the Finance Act, 1901, or any Act amending the same, shall be taken on the delivery of any article from any factory or refinery, which in pursuance of any Act of the present session is made subject to the supervision of the Commissioners of Customs or Commissioners of Inland Revenue,
AYES.
| ||
| Anson, Sir William Reynell | Greene, W. Raymond (Cambs | Pryce-Jones, Lt.-Col. Edward |
| Arkwright, John Stanhope | Guest, Hon. Ivor Churchill | Purvis, Robert |
| Arnold-Forster, Hugh O. | Hamilton, Rt. Hn. Ld. G. (Mid'x | Randles, John S. |
| Atkinson, Rt. Hon. John | Harris, Frederick Leverton | Rasch, Major Frederic Carne |
| Balfour, Rt. Hn. A. J. (Man'r | Heath, Arthur H. (Hanley) | Reid, James (Greenock) |
| Balfour, Rt. Hn Gerald W (Leeds | Heath, James (Staffords, N. W.) | Remnant, Jas. Farquharson |
| Bentinck, Lord Henry C. | Hogg, Lindsay | Renwick, George |
| Blundell, Colonel Henry | Kennaway, Rt. Hon. Sir J. H | Ritchie, Rt. Hn. Chas. Thomson |
| Boscawen, Arthur Griffith | Keswick, William | Ropner, Colonel Sir Robert |
| Brodrick, Rt. hon. St. John | Law, Andrew Bonar (Glasgow | Rutherford, John (Lancashire) |
| Campbell, J.H.M.(Dublin Univ | Lawson, John Grant (Yorks, N.R. | Sackville, Col. S. G. Stopford |
| Cavendish, V.C.W. (Derbyshire | Legge, Col. Hon. Heneage | Scott, Sir S. (Marylebone, W.) |
| Cecil, Evelyn (Aston Manor) | Leveson-Gower, Frederick N. S. | Seely, Maj. J.E.B. (Isle of Wight |
| Chamberlain, Rt. Hn. J. (Birm. | Loder, Gerald Walter Erskine | Smith, Abel H. (Hertford, E.) |
| Chamberlain, Rt Hn. J. A. (Worc | Long, Rt. Hn. Walter (Bristol, S | Smith, Jas. Parker (Lanarks) |
| Chapman, Edward | Lonsdale, John Brownlee | Smith, Hn. W. F. D. (Strand) |
| Charrington, Spencer | Lowther, C. (Cumb. Eskdale) | Spear, John Ward |
| Cochrane, Hon. T. H. A. E. | Lucas, Reg'ld J. (Portsmouth) | Stanley, Hon. A. (Ormskirk) |
| Colomb, Sir. John Charles Ready | Lyttelton, Hon. Alfred | Stanley, Lord (Lancs.) |
| Corbett, T. L. (Down, North) | Macdona, John Cumming | Sturt, Hon. Humphry Napier |
| Craig, Charles Curtis (Antrim, S | M'Arthur, Charles (Liverpool) | Talbot, Lord E. (Chichester) |
| Cranborne, Viscount | M'Killop, James (Stirlingshire | Thornton, Percy M. |
| Crossley, Rt. Hon. Sir Savile | Majendie, James A. H. | Tollemache, Henry James |
| Davenport, William Bromley | Maxwell, W. J. H. (Dumfriessh. | Tomlinson, Sir Wm. E. M. |
| Dickson, Charles Scott | Milvain, Thomas | Valentia, Viscount |
| Douglas, Rt. Hon. A. Akers | Morgan, David J(Walthamstow | Walker, Col. William Hall |
| Duke, Henry Edward | Morrell, George Herbert | Walrond, Rt Hn. Sir William H. |
| Elliot, Hon. A. Ralph Douglas | Morrison, James Archibald | Warde, Colonel C. E. |
| Faber, E. B. (Hants, W.) | Murray, Rt Hn A. Graham (Bute | Wortley, Rt. Hn. C. B. Stuart |
| Faber, George Denison (York | Murray, Charles J. (Conventry) | Wrightson, Sir Thomas |
| Fellowes, Hon. Ailwyn Ed. | Murray, Col. Wyndham (Bath | Wylie, Alexander |
| Fitzroy, Hon. Edward Algernon | Palmer, Walter (Salisbury) | Wyndham, Rt. Hon. George |
| Forster Henry William | Parkes, Ebenezer | |
| Fyler, John Arthur | Peel, Hn. Wm. R. Wellesley | TELLERS FOR THE AYES— |
| Gordon, J. (Londonderry, S.) | Percy, Earl | Sir Alexander Acland-Hood |
| Gore, Hn. G. R. C.Ormsby-(Salop | Platt-Higgins, Frederick | and Mr. Anstruther. |
| Greene, Hy. D. (Shrewsbury) | Pretyman, Ernest George | |
NOES.
| ||
| Barran, Rowland Hirst | Hayter, Rt. Hon. Sir Arthur D. | Samuel, Herbert L. (Cleveland |
| Bolton, Thomas Dolling | Helms, Norval Watson | Shackleton, David James |
| Caldwell, James | Kemp, Lieut.-Colonel George | Soares, Ernest J. |
| Cawley, Frederick | Levy, Maurice | Weir, James Galloway |
| Cremer, William Randal | M'Arthur, William (Cornwall | White, Luke (York, E. R.) |
| Dalziel, James Henry | M'Laren, Sir Chas Benjamin | Whitley, J. H. (Halifax) |
| Dewar, John A.(Inverness-sh.) | Moss, Samuel | |
| Dilke, Rt. Hon. Sir Charles | Nolan, Col. John P.(Galway, N. | TELLERS FOR THE NOES— |
| Emmott Alfred | O'Brien, P. J. (Tipperary, N.) | Mr. Lough and Mr. Ure. |
| Griffith, Ellis J. | Partington, Oswald | |
| Hayne, Rt. Hon. Chas. Seale | Priestley, Arthur | |
and shall be the same as those payable on the like articles on importation."
Resolution read a second time.
Motion made, and Question put, "That this House doth agree with the Committee in the said Resolution."
The House divided:—Ayes, 106; Noes, 28. (Division List No. 209.)
Board Of Agriculture And Fisheries Bill Lords
[SECOND READING.]
Order for Second Reading read.
*
in moving the Second Reading of this Bill, said the object of the measure was to transfer to the Board of Agriculture the powers and duties relating to sea and inland fisheries now carried out by the Board of Trade. The Board of Trade welcomed the Bill, and the Board of Agriculture were perfectly willing to undertake the duties and to do everything they could on behalf of so important a class, and to encourage and develop the fishing industry. The question to be dealt with related to the encouragement of production of food, and therefore comes within the province of the Agricultural Department. It was believed that the methods which had made the Board of Agriculture more and more useful to the farming industry would be useful also to the great fishing industry of the country. The fisheries were already under the Department of Agriculture in Holland, Germany, Belgium, Ireland and Canada. The transfer was to take place on October 1, and, subject to the approval of the Treasury, the duties would be carried out by an assistant secretary of the Board of Agriculture, with a separate department altogether, under whom there would be two inspectors, one for fresh water and the other for sea fisheries. The Bill was strongly supported by the whole of the fishing industry, and he hoped the House would now give it a Second Reading.
Motion made and Question proposed "That the Bill be now read a second time."
said the hon. Gentleman had made a very clear statement of the objects and intentions of the Bill, and if the representatives of other Departments followed his example they would be much more likely to get their measures passed than by endeavouring to rush them through without explanation or debate. He had placed on the Paper a Motion for the rejection of the measure, mainly because he had little confidence in the manner in which many of the duties of the Board of Agriculture were discharged. It should be remembered that by this Bill duties were to be handed over to a Department not directly represented in the House of Commons, and upon which, therefore, it was difficult to exercise legitimate pressure. He understood, however, that there was a general feeling on the part of the industry principally concerned in favour of the Bill, and therefore he would not move his Amendment.
Question put, and agreed to.
Bill read a second time, and committed for to-morrow.
Sale Of Butter Bill
Order for consideration, as amended (by the Standing Committee) read and discharged. Bill withdrawn.
Poor Law (Dissolution Of School Districts And Adjustments) Bill
Read the third time and passed.
Public Works Loans Remission Of Debt
Considered in Committee.
(In the Committee.)
Resolved, That it is expedient to authorise the remission of a certain debt due to the Public Works Loan Commissioners by the Port Seton Harbour Commissioners in pursuance of any Act of the present session relating to Local Loans.—( Mr. Elliot.)
Resolution to be reported to-morrow.
Ireland Development Grant Bill
As amended, considered; to be read the third time to-morrow.
Naval Works Bill
Read the third time, and passed.
Naval Works (Portsmouth Barracks Site) Bill
Order for Second Reading read, and discharged:—Bill withdrawn.
Marriages Legislation Bill
Read a second time, and committed for to-morrow.
Civil Servants (Retirement At The Age Of Sixty-Five)
Copy ordered, "of Treasury Minute, dated the 30th day of July, 1903, stating the circumstances under which certain Civil Servants have been retained in the service after they have attained the Age
of Sixty-five; and of the Return therein referred to."—( Mr. Elliot.)
Post Office (Contract For Accelerated Mail Service To And From Ireland Via Carlisle, Stranraer, And Larne)
Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Contract, dated the 8th day of November, 1902, with the Glasgow and South Western Railway Company, the Portpatrick and Wigtownshire Joint Committee, and the Belfast and Northern Counties Railway Company, for an Accelerated Mail Service to and from Ireland via Carlisle, Stranraer, and Larne, printed in Parliamentary Paper, No. 56, of session 1903, be approved."—( Mr. Elliot.)—Debate arising.
Debate adjourned till this day.
Board Of Agriculture And Fisheries Salaries, Etc
Committee to consider of authorising the payment, out of moneys to be provided by Parliament, of any Salaries and Expenses which may become payable under any Act of the present session to transfer to the Board of Agriculture powers and duties relating to the Industry of Fishing, and to amend the Board of Agriculture Act, 1889 (King's Recommendation signified), this day.—( Mr. Ailwyn Fellowes.)
Whereupon, in pursuance of the Order of the House of the 28th day of July, Mr. SPEAKER adjourned the House without Question put.
Adjourned at five minutes after One o'clock.